The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, October 16, 1902, Page 3

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Se EE EAS Sat SE McFARILAND BROS, Harness and Saddlery, Buggies a Tk Read Wagon Harnes #10 to 330; Siagle and prices. Bugs, Tops, Cushions, Wagon Sheets and Bows Harness $7 to $25 Come ani see us; get our prices and you will surely trade with A Most Liberal Offer. The St. Louis Mirror is a twenty- eight page paper, in magazine form, edited by William Marion Reedy, as sisted by a staff of contributorscam- prising the beat writers and literary authorities on all current subjects, social, religious, scientific, financial, literary or artistic. The Mirror is a weekly review of men and affairs; a treasury ©! short stories and good poetry; a paper in which the beat books, best plays and best music are ably reviewed, and all topics of contemporary interest are given careful attention, It is thenp- to-date paper for the merchant, the teacher, the professional man, the student, the politician, as well as for woman and the home, If you will send us 19, in silver or stamps, we will mail the Mirror to your address for ten weeks. Tue Mirror, Second-hand Hurness $3 to ¥ Oak, Vehicles are the | u | ‘ ; Saddles, all styles tlest in design and printing. McoFARL AND BROS,, Butler, Mo. Women and Jeweis. 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 yreatest of all jewels, health, is ruined in the strenuous efforts to make or save the money to purchase them. 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 bronehial 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 can get Dr. G. G. Green's relieble | remedies at any drugstore, OW Get Green’s Special Almanac, Worth of NEW MUSIC Postpaid $ ] .OO For \ In order to introduce it to the public, namely: $3.0 ' One copy Lake Park Schottische price | One copy Enraptured Waltz, price | One copy Vapor City Two-Step March, price Svc One copy Weltmer March, price One copy Kaylor Bros’, Schottisehe, price One copy of the latess song, entitled, ‘If Only the Right Step is Taken,’? we 0c Ae For $1.00 we will send to any address, postpaid, the above music. It is all brand new, between third and fourth grade, Your money back if not satisfactory, Address all | orders to J. HW. KAYLOR & CO., Music Publishers, Nkvapa, Mo, ORDER NOW, Vernon Co, ASA LUW hAlts lu ST. LOUIS | | via the Missouri Pacitic Railway, Ac | count Fall Festivities, | The annual Horse Show will take | place in-the Exposition Coliseum KIL-KOLD MEYER’S TABLET. Hate a cold worse than you do. They stop a: cough and Keep it stopped. Cure Grip, Headache and Malaria, too. 25 Cents at your druggist’s. If send price to MEYER’S MEDICINE CO., 260-266 W. Broadway, New Yor!:. |} the person ‘Poem ine bet Sty are the only make in the world with particular and precise models for every possible build of figure. By buying the Erect Form you can secure perfect e: and an absolutely exact fit. There are over fifty different styles The Erect Form follows 1pon the bust or abdomen, but gives a graceful effect to by keeping the shoulders in a strajght line. jt For medium figures =~ "Ered ore vafapamesabore but made of fine coutil 97: sea and he Ni Erect a Sheng roger meget For the __ Atall desiers. If yours cannot supply you mention his name and forward price direct to y, N.Y. Neverher comet cad lake the place ofthe W.B. eect Poem. Accept sdexbutinte. he can’t supply you, | uble as much service ir own Contour—it does not $ ed, for average figures - Tere Wor developed figures. ove’ ps and abdomen . For stout figures. Long over abe For full hips- 3, or fal figures—long 27 3.00 m3 = + = + £00 4 has a very long hip. the new it skirts 711. at 62. Style 713, at $4 Tron NOW ber rd to Sth, thelsive, ) da addition to these attractions there will be running races daily on the mile track at the Pair Grounds Fahd base ball games between teats of the American and National Leagues on their respective grounds. An excellent Opportunity will be Offered to see the World's Fair site and the progress made on the build: ings for the wreat internateonalexpo- sition of 1904, See local agent for detailed ‘infor- Mmution us to rates tickets, ete H. €. Towssenp, Gen’! Pass’r and Vicket Aut, St. Lonis, Mo. ~LUW RALES 1U ST, LOUIS via the Missouri Pacific Railway, Ac- count Fall Festivities, Which include the Great St. Louis Fair, which gives $30,000, in preti- ums. the gorgeous Veiled Prophet pageant; Street” Patr-and-Carnivaky Horse Show in the Coliseum; running horse races daily by the best thor- oughbreds in the country and base ball games between teams of the American and National Leagues, Allevents during October aud the first week in November, Ask your Jocal agent for detailed information and visit the World's Fair City. H.C. TowxseSp, Gen'l Pass’ and Ticket Agt., St. Louis, Mo. Order of Publication, STATE OF MISSOURL, | P= County of Bates, 7 In the circuit court of Betes county, Missouri, in vacation, September 13th, liw2,C A Min- nick and GW Minnick, her husvand, plai tiffs, vi ih Hyatt and — Hyatt, her hus- | band, Martha Kegerries and Peter K: gerries | her husband, Emma Brown and Abram Brown her husband, Aona Belle Anstown, nee ‘Thompson and —Ansdown, her husband, Kobert L Gregory, James Davis, John Thompson, Mary Thompson, Frank ‘Thomp- son, George Thompson, Lucy ann Thomp- son, Della Bronson, nee Minniek and — Bron- son her husband, The Bateso. Investment Co., andvohn C Hayes, defendants. Order of Publication, Now at this day comes the plaintiffs herein by their attorney, W O Jackson, and files their amended petition ajleging, among other things that detendants, Mary Thompson Frank ‘Thompson, George hompson, Lucy \nn Thompson, and Della Bronson nee Minnick, and — Bronson her husband, are not. residents of the state of M ssouri. Whereupon it is or- ds red by the clerk in vaestion that said de- fendants be notified Ld publication that laintiffs bave commenced a suit against them n this court, the object and general nature of | which is to obtgir a decree in partition and or- | der of sale, of the following descrived land lying and being situate in the county of Bates | and state of Missouri, to-wit: The west haif| of Jots three (8) ani four (4) of the northeast | quarter of section two (2) all in township thir- ty-pine (3%) of range thirty, and thay unless the said defendants be and appearat this court atthe next term thereof, to be begun holden at the court house in the city of butler, in said county, on the lith day of November next, and on or before the first day of said-term, answer or plead to the petition in said cause, the same wiil be taken as confessed and judgment will be rendered accordingly. And be it furthe: ordered that a copy hereof be published, sccording to law, in the BuTLeR WeeKkxy 1: » & Newspaper published in said for four weeks successively, published a; \-ast once a week, the last inser- tion to be at least fifteen daysbefore the dret day of suid next term of thie court. A. B, LUUWICK, Ciremt Clerk. A true copy from the record. Witness {sxat] my band and seal of the circuit court ot Bates county, this i3th day of Sep- tember, w2, A. B, LUDWICK, Cireuit Clerk, 464t the husband He attacked Adams with a revolver, | beating him over the head and thet shot him. few dead in his room in Dominick street then shot himesclf. One Dead, Two in Hospital New York, Oct features surround murder and, afterward, a suicide on the lower West Side. On Wednesday Mrs. Adams, wife of 10 —Mysterious two attemps at a ple tal, where she is being treated fora ‘bullet wound in the head asterer, Was admitted to a hospi She was accompanied by Henry Brockstedt. | | How she received the wound is not ;known, as the stories told do not agree Twenty four hours later Brockstedt ntered the Adams home and found of the woman alone. The police took up the case and at hours later fonnd Brocksted: He had swallowed carbolic acid and Adams was con veved to the hospital, where his wife lay. The couple verse, but no clear idea could be gathered of the shooting other than that Broekstedt had attempted a double murder of jealousy Like Daisies Before the Seythe, Raby lives are destroyed in summer by cholera infantum. The attack of the disease is sudden, its progress is sometimes terribly rapid. Mothers who have given their children Perry Davis’ Painkiller can tell how this treatment has cheeked the diarrhea and vomiting, aud put the little pa tient out of dauge: and 50 ets, re permitted to con- Bibles and Hymns Barred, Lincoln, Neb. Oct, 10,—Bible read- ings and the singing of hymns in the publicschools of Nebraska are forbid- den by the constitution of the state, saws the Supreme Court, in reversing the tinding of the Gage County Dis triet Court, The opinion in’ part BAR: “Exercises by al teacher in publi schoolinaschoal building in school of the rej from the Bible and in the singi sgngs and bymns and offering prayer to the Deity in accordance with the doctrines, beliefs, customs or usages of sectarian churches or religious or- ganizations, is forbidden by the con- stitution of the state.” ‘The decision is a vietory for Daniel Freeman, supposed to be the original homesteader of the United States, who, nearly four years ago, began the fight against reading the Biblein the schools of his home district. Be- in guns and hardware has received a on the west side of town. ev. A Cattleman Played Robber. Topeka, Oct. 11.—A Topeka dealer letter from a Denver man who signs nimself “T. K.,”° which serves toclear upa mystery in police cireles here. | | The night of September ous person, deseribed as being large | yj, 2 amysteri- | 4 of statue and wearing a slouch hat.) ay old woman rushed sterk held up nine people within an hour | j He shot at | some-oF his-victins-and tet-others| 5jaus was giving the jget away without taking their mon-| to his subjects The police heard the shots and | tried to locate the mysterious rob |+ few blocks ahead of them. It The letter is written from Denver | ¢ ind the man says that he is the per-|; oward, and in his letter describes | , The books of the hard-| ware firm show that a revolver such | theinstance, as deseribed was sold September 12, |; and Mr, Howard remembers the man himself. The man that his secret is too good to]; as he deseribes keep and that he was “feeling good” |, on the night of whieh he writes and thought it would be a good idea to give the Topeka police something to do, Consequently he “held up" ev- eryone he could find, He was cattle City and says he slept in the Throop hotel the night after his robbery, CABTOFN TA. urs the YA 1 k ad \ WAN iguature 4. “Jim” Butler For Congress, St. Louis, Oct. 9.—"Jim” J. Butler was nominated by acclamation for! the long and short terms by the Twellth district, Democratic « sional to-day, was no other candidate, Butler isa son of Colonel “Ed” Butler, for years the Democratic boss in St, Louis, He} was elected to the last Cor ongres convention Chere ss, but] lot box stutti The election for the short teri was | specially called by Governor Dockery | to fill the vacaney. the nomination that would regularly have been made this time if the seat | had not been declared vacant, The long terinis Omaha, Oct. 10,—Caldwell Tayloe, ginning with a protest to the teacher and directors and finally taking it to the courts, he was beaten in every ae tion until he reached the court of last resort. The opinion of the three judges was unanimous The High Cost of Living. Chicago,{Oct. 0.—Figures gathered by the board of arbitration appoint ed to the wage increase demanded by street railway compa- nies’ employes show that the cost of living in the past four years is 40 per cet, while wages have remained sta- tionary, Wheat, coffee, sugar and shoes show a decrease in cost. Practically all the other uecessities show in- creases ranging up to 40 per cent Commodities on which figures were collected and the percentage of in- crease are; Tea, 16; soap, 33; starch, 11; beef, 5; mutton, 46; sausages, 15; reut, 40, Butter, lard, cheese and milk show substantial increases, not to mention coal. daiaccanenellliaanpectainns Confederate Monument Unveiled. Danville, Ky., October 10.—Ten thousand persons attended the un- veiling of the monument to the con- federate dead on the old battlefield of Verryvillethis morning. Addresses were made by Judge M.C Saufl consider re) | Stanford. Hon. R. J. Breckinridge of Danville and Gen. J. A. West of Atlanta. Miss Ellay Hay, of Perry- ville, assisted by Miss Annie Tribble of Junction City, unveiled the monu ment’ The great multitude was en- tertained at dinner by the citizens of the west end of Boyle county at a large basket picnic. Sluu We word S100. ‘The readers of this paper wiil be j leas ed to learn that there is at leasi on: dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that » Catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure known to the medical Admini-trator’s Notice, that lettere of admin ered. upon the eetatan’ Margaret Propp deorasea Were grante! to the andereigned ot the hh day of September ime, by the probe:e court of Bates connty Miseoor! All pereone hayi sete. are requi: lor allow ance to the administrator within one yea: after the date of seiri letters, or they mar bh pat from any benefit Of said eatete: an? { euch claime be not exhibited within two veare from the date of thie pablicatton;—the- will be forever barred ‘This 6th Tay of September, 1902. - D V BROWN, 45-48 Public Administrator. ‘ fraternity. Catarrh being a constitution - al disease, requires, a constitutional teatment Hall's Co ~arrh Cure is tanen internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surtaces of the sys ‘em. thereby destroying the toundation ot the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitutic. and assisting nature in doing its work The proprietors haye so much taith in its curative powers, that they offer One boss farmer on the Sioux Indian re- servation near Naper, Neb., wasshot and killed last night by Bear, an In- dian who, as he was fleeing, also shot | and killed Johnnie Shaw, another In- dian. ‘Tayloe was killed with ashot- gon. ‘The killing is the outcome of the dissatisfaction felt by the Indians for some time on account of the ad- ministration of their affairs. Bear, had been forbidden to sell stovewood to those residing outside the reserva- tion. He was captured this morning | at Bonesteel, 8. D. Priest Was Willing. When General Butler was incharge of New Orleans, one of his Catholic soldiers died, and it was reported to. him that the poet-priest, Father! Ryan, refused to read the burial ser vice. In a towering rage Butler sent for | the priest aud demanded to know why he refused the honors of the church to the deceased. Father Ryan quietly said: “It is} not true that | have refused to bury | him. Onthe contrary, it is the r- verse of true, for it would give me great pleasure, General, to bury the | whole lot of you.” How Are Your Kidneyert stairs into the hall w ber, but he was always operating @| post until she son who bought a revolver from Mr. | scuffed with coin, when, in a pushed him off the precipice. Tl without waiting to dress, she ran to man on his way home from Kansas] ; had been at work STARTLED THE PRINCE. Naked Woman Told How She hilled a Brigaad St. Petersburg.—aA nse ells of a novel surpr o laus. Theother it 3s neked nto the rayal palace aad 2 Sentinels and court o stop her. The old reached ’ whom she ated = what ollows: She was going home rom omarket, her stocking well lonelt nountain spot, abont an ur from he capital, a brigand sei dt ook her money and clothes and hen ordered to jump off the rocks into a lake. She | al to be allowed to blindfold her eves ere face ng death, and as the robber bent flown to pick up her bande she the palace to ive the alarm search for tt Soldiers were sent to he body, whieh they found in the lake, ogether with three other naked corpses, iidienting: that the rand for some tl Globe Democrat, EASY BNOUGH Story of a Young Priest Who Mixed Up Text Hugh Lane, n Catholic church The late Theresa's i pastor of S often told the story of a © Dome iniean who, touring [rel ond series of revival meetings by the members of his order was given his tiest opportunity to Preach a sermon one night when the meetings were for OMT: AN ARI Bo USA 2 he invited questions if: HY portlo yn his sermon should pero comprehension of the tie ¢ and then took for his text the feeding of the multitude. He was naturally Hustrated and misquots * And they fed ten people thousand loaves and ten das follows with ter thousand tishes.” He was called to recognition of his at, rm error by the local jukeeper who - ---— shouted An Indian Killed the Farmer. “shure, anu that’s no miracle at all! Oicould do that mesilf The young priest went on, leedless of the interruption, and made such a fine impression that he was told off to deliver the later when again the services were for sermon two nights men only. Peeling that thetheme was erepetble ok fine tet ete bettie application he resumed it and began: “And they fed ten thousand people 0.1 tenloaves of bread atid ten fishes.” Then casting about until } itsk found the inkeeper’s place, ti ingly: ; “And could) you do that, my friend?” stnil- “was the prompt anuswer— “aisily! Gicould do it, your. river- ence, wid what left Tuesday noight!"—Cineinnati qnirer. Was over from En- Educate Your Bowels With Cascarets. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever, lc, 5c. If C.C.C. fail, druggist ‘und money. Missouri Bred Bulls in California. Two Missouri bred bulls have made reputations for themselves and for their home state by taking the best prizes at the California state fair this season, Joe Marzen, of Lovelocks, Nev., bought two bullsfrom Missou- rians in June of this year. Blythe Vietor was bought from Dr. Hobbs’ Sparagus Pills cure all kidney ills. Sam ple free. Add. Sterling ¥2:nedy Co. Chicago or N ¥ Burglars Made Good Haul. Davenport, Neb., Oct. 11.—Burglar Tuesday night blew open the safe in J. W. Lowrie’s hardware store and secured $5,400 fn cash. The town’ was aroused by the explosion but be- fore anybody eould reach the place the robbers had made their escape. Bloodhounds were sent for and put ou trail, but were unable to follow it. | No glimpse of the robbers was secur- ed, and it is not known how many there were. Gen. Bragg Transferred. Washington, Oct. 11.—Genu. Bragy, cousul- general at Havana, has been transfegred to the post of United States consul-general at Hong Kong, taking the place of William Rubive, wio has been transferred to the eou- sulate at Huvatia. { Gen. Bragg wade himself obnox. Hundred Dolla:s tor any case that 11/joue to the Cubaus by a statement tails tu cure. Send tor list of testimon wis Address F. J. Curngy & Co., Tuiedo,O, ga@pSold bydruggis 75c. contained in a letter to his wife which found its way into the newspapers. | | George Causey of Shawnee Mound, Henry ‘county, and eaptured the sweepstakes for best bull of any age, at Sacramento week before last Blythe Vietor, which heads Mar- zens herd of Durham-. is a 4 are old. Marshall's Combination, a yearling purchased trom Mr, Mar- shall, of Cooper county, took first pleee ia the veartog class aud leaded the young herd which captured tirst p! Kk. Godfrey, who lias been herds- man for various of Missouri's best breeders, nccompanied the animals to) Mr. Marzen’s home and fitted them for the fair. Mr. Godfrey says that the Cahfornia bseeders at the fiir announced without any reserve iwhatever, thar th se two bulls were the best that ever had been shown in the state of Californiaa—K. C. Dro- ver’s Telegram. rts aud Ciuidren, v2 Always Bought ta ~W e The Kid Yuu Bears the Signature ot

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