The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, August 14, 1902, Page 3

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' SE ——— Wagon Harnes $10 to $30; Sings Harness $7 to $25; Second-hand Hurness $3 to $15; Saddles, all st; agon Sheets and Bows. Our Vehicles are the latest in design and painting. | the chancel. Here there are six gild- and prices. Bugs, Tops, Cushions, Come and see po get on prices and you will surelyjtrade with Colored, Art Pictures. The first of a series of beautiful colored art pictures twill 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 vents a copy. Onsale at all news stands 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. McFARLAND BROS, NEW LIGHTS IN ST. PAUL’S. Part of Electric Plant in Magnificent i Londen Cathedral Installed and | Used for First Time. ; A private view of the electric light- , ing of St. Paul’s cathedral at London, | which has been in course of installa- tion for three years, was given to rep- resentativés of the press the other day. The work is not yet completed, and it is estimated that it will be a year before it is finished. Eight hun- dred of the 1,250 lights are yet to be placed in position. The main features are completed, however, and they give a comprehensive idea of the scheme. The electricians have succeeded in making the cathedral light without garishness. The west portico is light- ed by two immense artistic bronze standards and the nave by five smaller ones. Beneath the dome are eight bronze pendants, while two others are in the transepts. The dome itself is not finished. It is proposed to place 300 lights in the positions occupied by the old gas jets, les} The beauty of the exhibition lay in McFARLAND BROS., Butler, Mo. ed brass pendants, which, it is said, were accidentally made in the shape of crowns. In addition to bringing out the details of the carved oak in the choir by means of concealed upturned lamps, the light also brings out soft- ly the glories of the mosaics of the vault in the most effective manner. The choir, aisles, entrances, consistory ' court and whispering gallery are not | Wilmington, N. C., August 7.—A] yet completed. The lighting of the cyclone passed over Carolina beach erypt in the basement is completed. Th last night and blew down a large pa-| aimeuitics in piercing the walle and vilion injuring sixteen people, some] foors so as to avoid the tombs, Some- probably fatally. The cyclone came} thing like 16 miles of cable, contain- up suddenly and before the people ™~ v4 i ard bo aig om been Miia sya: : us farin the work. J. Pierpont Mor- — get out a hoe ay it hy gan, who pays for the installation, has agian over on the beach a mass Of} seen the chancel and expressed his sat- ruins. isfaction with it. The cost of the work Some of the injured were not res-| already amounts to $50,000, Mr. Mor- cued from the wreck for several] &*? has agreed to pay the $35,000 nec- essary t lete it. hours. The only occupants of the Sadie tack tert house that escaped were three babies and they were not scratched, Raleigh, XN. C., August 7.—A severe Business Men of Alaska Territory ; ; Are Asked to Subscribe $20,000 windstorm passed over this part of to Establish It the state last night, wrecking many CYCLONE IN NORTH CAROLINA, Sixteen Injured, Some Probably Fa- tally, at Wilmington. TO HAVE WIRELESS LINE. § >. -¥ for small fruite such as Strawberries, | ‘. what they order and they will get it . > fresh as,the nurseries are but a short 4 References:—Mo, State Bank, Bates _, County Bank and Farmers Bank. Paper of America. The Great N : oor Wal Globe-Democrat The Darty 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, | Sunday, Including Sunday. Without Sunday. Edition. One Year - §$600]One Year - - $4.00 40 to 60 Pages. 6 Months - - - 3.00) 6Months - - - 2.00) One Year - - $2.00 8 Months - - - 1.50|3Monuths - - - 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 _ correct In every detail It has no equal as a home and family journal and 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 tree, Address THE GLOBE PRINTING CO., St. Louis, Mo “IT IS IGNORANCE THAT WASTES EFFORT.” TRAINED SERVANTS USE SAPOLIO> ‘PLANT TREES. There is no crop more profitable or easy to cultivate than fruit trees. I am agent for the celebrated STAR NURSERIES, at Lees Summit and can take your orders for all of the best varieties of Apple, Peach, Pear, Plum ete. Also ,Gooseberries, Currants, Grapes. ete } The stock is guaranteed true to name and hardy. Persons wauting trees will get just | A NEW FAST TRAIN -= | Between St. Louls and Kansas City and distance from this place. J - Call at Residence west Ft. Scott at. J. I. DUNN, Butler. Mo. farm houses, unroofing three cotton] The people of Alaska are being factories and entirely wrecking the asked to interest themselves in wire- large warehouse of the American To- dave tologtaphy. 1a ite inst issde the ’ “ua Skaguay Alaskan says: baeco company at Smithtield. “Wireless telegraph propositions > for Alaska are coming thick and fast. One was submitted to the chamber of commerce last night, emanatin Jewels, candy, flowers, man—that] from the Alaska NVisetaa isleeraie is the order of a woman's preferences. | company, of Seattle, Robert L. Moore, Jewels form a magnet of mighty] manager. It asks the business men power to the average woman. Even of southern Alaska to subscribe $20,- ; 000 to the undertaking, te—be—re- that zreatest of all jewels, health, 1s turned in telegraphic service at the ruined in the strenuous efforts to} rate of $3 per aerogram of ten word. make or save the money to purchase} and ten cents per each additional them. If a woman will risk her} Word for transmission” between health to get a coveted gem, then let northern and southern terminals. é f ial “The pledged subscriptions are to her fortify herself against the insid-] pe paid when the line is in working ious consequences of coughs, colds| order. If any competing company and bronchial affections by the reg- lowers the rate this company is to ular use of Dr: Boschee’s German| ™®t the rate and reeoup the sub- Syrup It will promptly arrest con-| STiDers at the lowest rate. ‘The con sumption in its early stages and heal pany will, moreover, redeem their the affected lungs and bronchial subscriptions at the premium of ten tubes and drive the dread disease per cent. off their rates. The cou- from the system. It is not.acure-all | Poms _Will_be_ transferable, and the but it tka cottain cure for coughs Tine is to extend from British Colum- colds and all bronchial troubles, You bia, touching all the larger Alaskan can get Dr. G.G,. Green’s relieble towns, to Valdes. The line is to be A 5 RE wa ss: eompleted by December.” remedies at any drugstore. . «-o-w Get Green’s Special Almanac. RATS DESTROY COMMISSION CASTORIA. Rekta the Tho Kind You Have Always Bought signature Girls Killed ona Trestle. Women and Jewels. Lieut, Dinmont, Serving in the Phil- ippines, Fails to Get His Papers Because of Rodents, Adjt. Gen. Corbin has received a ge in the mail from the Philip- Hopkinaville, Ky., August 6,—An whic 1 when opened revealed a < tattered und shredded parchment. it excursion-train on the Illinois Cen- represented the remnants of a com- tral caught five young women ona] mission issued only a few months ago high trestle at Dawson Springs this} to Lieut. Dinmont appointed an offie who was recently y in the regular afternoon. Two were crushed to Den. urs ked ‘ . . army. Gen. Corbin was asked for an death and the others, jumping, prob- explanation—ot-the—mutitated docu ably were fatall injured. ment, “Rats,” he replied, as he care- The dead are Misses Johnnie Smith | fully folded the commission out and Padueah, Ky.; Lucy Stevenson Hick- inspected it. A strange feature was - s vhi vd sha i ory Grove, Kv. that while the rodents had eaten into Hom ? " oe the sides and upper end lower corners, The injured are: Misses Lena Flint, wee ree they had not destroyed a single por- Edith Stevenson, Annie Nichols, tion of any of the official signatures. President Roosevelt’s was in the lower Blow Are Your Kidneys! “ right-hand corner, Secretary Root’s op Tree nad Btorllae Poneto Cee ER? | opposite. and Gen, Corbin's in the up- per, left-hand corner. Around each name, however, the rats had sealloped a = es a the paper to a depth of three and four SenecajFulls, N. Y., Auguet 7.—| inches. A new commission has been Charles Shandley shot his wife} executed and will be sent to Lieut. Din- through the neck this morning ard| mont by the next return mail. then shot himself through the head be dying instantly. There is little hope NEGROES WANT MILLIONS. of Mre. Shandley’s recovery. Jeal-| atro-americans Would Have Con- gress Give Them $500,000,000 to .ousy was the “ause. Pay for Deporting the Race, Jealousy Causes Shooting. The Colored Emigration and Com- mercial association which was in session in Chattanooga, Tenn., unan- imously adopted a memorial praying congress to appropriate $500,000,000 to deport such negroes as desire to leave.the United States to Africa or ly recom. | Some ee ee te The memorial my as being all theyare | is addressed to the president and : aoa ciuwany, al sie __} members-of congress. The convention pointed out*the al- leged wrongs of the negro, asserting that he is not granted the rights ofa human being in this country, especially in the south; that it is better for him to emigrate to some other country where he can enjoy more freedom. } sn Bishop Turner, of the African Meth- odist church, is the leading spirit of the & emigration movement. Plans ate now eer considered_by the convention to me | taise a fund of $100,000 with which to buy ships on which negroes are to be ' } Ferocius Beast Trying to Make Meal Of | . the Equines. | A two-year-old Indian tiger was killed in a fight with horses on a cir- jecus train while en route from Goshen | to Poughkeepsie, N. Y., early the other day. The tiger, which hed been recently imported, escaped from its wagon den while the train was in motion. It crawled over the tops of four wagons and entered a car containing 30 draft horses. A fierce battle ensued, the panic-stricken horses plunging and kicking at the savage intruder. When the train reached here the tiger was found dead and mangled un- der the hoofs of one of the horses. Most of the horses. were badly scratched and bitten. It is the first case on record, the showmen say, of a horse killing a tiger. The striped beast was confined in a cage that was on a flat car in . the train when it started on a short run to this city at an early hour, Next to the car carrying the tiger cage was a stock car, in which were 30 of the best horses in the show. In some manner unexplained the tiger got out of its cage after the train was under way. Cireus hands were asleep under the cage, but were not awakened, The beast had paid no attention to them, and appearances indicate that he made his way along the car and forced himself into the opening at the end of the car containing the horses, The animals were packed in, and from the deep gashes on their backs it would appear that the tiger climbed over them until he reached the mid- dle of the car, when he attempted to make a meal of Toby. The ensuing struggle was terrifie, All of the wood- work in the interior of the car was smashed and the side walls and top were covered with blood. The terrified horses, in their efforts to get away from the fierce beast that had attacked them in the darkness, crowded toward the end of the car, leaving a space through which the tiger dropped to the floor, Then it was that the intrepid Toby, by a well-di- rected kick, smashed in the skull of the -tiger—and—jumped—on—him-amtit nts skin was rendered useless for decora- tive purposes, WESTERN CATTLE MARKETS. Report of Internal Commerce Shows No Substantial Loss tn Live Stock Receipts at Five Leading Points. The latest report on internal com- merce, from the treasury bureau of statistics, shows no substantial loss in_receipts of live stock at-five west- ern markets for the first third of this year. For the first four months of 1902, 10,076,373 head were received at these centers, compared with 10,106,- 495 head in 1901 and 9,735,324 head forthe corresponding period of 1900, April receipts of cattle at these markets were considerably higher than those of April, 1900, but somewhat below those of April. 1901. Receipts of calves continued to exceed the arrivals of the two preceding years, but hogs and sheep both fell below the figures of 1900 and 1901, At Chicago the de- mand for live stock for ¢ ity use and consumption for the month of April show a shrinkage of five per cent in all kinds of stock; but for the four months ending with April there was an increase of 11.69 per cent, over the requirements of 1901, April receipts HORSES KILL TIGER. | Is Worsted While; at this point, however, fell off 3.222 ear loads compared with those of April, last year. For the four months énd-, ing with April receipts gained 3.019 We also at } both re- ceipts and shinments, while at Omaha and St. Joseph first third of the year shows a gain in and ship-| ments. WOULD WED ON THE “LOOP.” the receipts Indiana Swain Ready te Make the! Perilous Trip Rather Than Fail to Get His Girl, To be married while “looping the loop” at Chicago is the ambition of | William Darrow, of Liberty, Ind. Mr. Darrow aspires to a loop wedding be- cause he fears his intended will not consent to any other sort of nuptials, He has sent the following letter to the manager of the Chicago chutes and loops: Dear Sir: A young lady living near Liberty has told me she won't marry me unless I will go to Chicago with her and marry in one of your loops. ‘Now, she laughed when she said this like it was a joke, but she thinks a whole lot of me and she will keep her word. I don’t know what the loops is, but she has rode in it and she says I wouldn’t dare to goin one. If you will fix it for me I'll pay you well and fool her, If I couldn't get her any other way I am willing to go inthe loops. Inclosed is a stamp for an answer. Please let me hear from you right away. Yours truly, WILLIAM DARROW. The answer was a consent. If the couple wish to marry on the loop the management is willing to arrange for the ceremony to take place at the ex- act moment the car arrives upside down at the top of the loop. Tf neces- sary a special bridal train of two cars will be provided. Patriotiam in Public Schools, As long as the public school chil- dren are taught, as they are now, to remember Memorial day, says the Chi- cago Inter Ocean, there is little dan- ger that the grown people of the coun- try will forget it, or what it meens. Siberian Railronds, An official report gives the estimated additional eost necessary to complete Siberian railroads at $36,050,000. ADVOCATE BOUNTIES TO ENCOURAGE CATTLE RAISING. National Retail Butchers’ and Meat Dealers’ Protecteve Association Condema Bankrup:cy Law. Washington, Aug. 6.—The Nation- al Retait Butchers’ and Meat Dealers Protective ussociation to-day adopt- ed resolutions recommending that the eastern, middle and southern states offer inducements by bounty, or any other means, for the upbuild- ing of the cattle raising industry in those sections. Resolutions also were adopted fa- voring the repeal of the present na- national bankruptcy law, as a hard- ship on small business men, and extending thanks to Attorney Gen- eral Knox and to Attorney General Davies of New York for their injune- tion proceedings against theso-called Beef Trust. A resolution denouncing the allege ed trust was introduced, but action was deferred until to-morrow. There was @ long discussion on the subject. All the speakers were in favor of the purpose of the resolution, and the only point of difference was as to the form of expression. Boars the CABSTCRIA. Signature The Kind You Have Always Bought Oil in Jasper County, Carthage, Mo., August 7.—(il has been struck in four places in Jasper county, excitement prevailed to-day by the report that a spouting flow of oil had just been struck on the Bradford lease, fifteen miles northwest of Carthage The drill hole on the [ease is down Considerable reports, one of the men employed at that place, and who has had an ex- tensive experier ce in the oil business prophesied that ofl would be struck before the drill had reached a depth of 1,000 feet, LE r , ONY Af Mob Rule in Pennsylvania. Summit Hill, Pa., August 7.—There was a reign of terror this morning. Several hundred strikers paraded the streets in quest of non-strikers on their way to work, Street cars were stopped and the town wasin the hands of the mob several hours. Three men were thrown over a steep embaukiment, but their injuries-were Slight. Vive arrests were made. = Sheriff Gombeau has asked for troops. They Work While You Sleep. While your mind and body rest Cas- carets Candy Cathartic repair your digestion, your liver, your bowels, put them in perfect order. Genuine tablets stamped C. C. C. Never sold in bulk. All druggists, 1c¢- Fire at Excelsior S$ Excelsior Springs i —Barly this morning small blaze was discovered in Iarrs grocery store, directly opposite the Silonm Springs, aud before ter was avail able, it had develop toan wneon- trolable fire. By 7 o'clock this morning tire block of frames 1 & sumed. The Journal pletely destroyed. Ti mated at $90,000. the en- een CON- thee was com- loss is) esti- and of them- annoying, Piles are not only in, selves very painful ar but often greatly aygravate and ey- en cause other grave and painful al- fects, and should, therefore. not he neglected. Tabler’s Buckeye Pile Ointment is a great boon tosufferers as it will cure them. Price, 50 cents in bottles. Tubes, 75 cents —H. L. Tucker, Robbers Use Dynamite. Paola, Kan., August 7 —Burglars entered the genera! mercha ndisestore of George Caseheer at Louisburg, twelve miles northeast of Paola, Thursday night. They blew the safe to pieces with dpnamite, but there was very little money in it. The robbers then stole Dr.G. A Boyle's horse and buggy and drove to Lisk, Mo., where they were found Wedwes- day morning Constipation, impaired digestion und-a torpid liver, are the mosteom. mon ailments that are responsible for that tited, listiess, fagged-out feeling that makes the sniamer a dreaded period to so any people, Herbine will cure. eontipation, it im proves the digestion and arouses the liver to nogmal fetivity, Price, 50 cents —H. L Tucker. ostt OO fetid —terording to” GPE

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