The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, October 23, 1902, Page 7

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3 PRR EA. LE ST EE ts Seer om ween coesamaaamnanamenmeemenemnanenen ¥ THE SECRET OF LIFE. On Farm Loans DUVALL & I offer inducements in the matter of long time, easy payments, liberal terms and fair treatment. PRELL LP RAPP PPP LAL LLL LLL PLL ELL IESE HON.J. 8. NEBWREBRY, F.J. TYGARD, President. THE BATES 6 BUrLsAR, Mo. Suocessor to BATES COU. Ketastisuep Dac,, 1870. a CAPITAL, $76,000. Bates County | \ (BUTLER, MO.: Oapital, = br title to all lands and town lo’ papers drawn, en q Hon. J. B, NEWsERRY, .C, Crank q Be Fo re eationt, Vice-President. Seo’y. & Treas, r) Jno, C, Hays, Abstractor, 8. F. Wannock, Notary. { Three very brief declarations of Rhe dominant republican belief in re- hod to trusts and the tariffare worth hoWein defining the policy of that than are yards of platformi- des, adopted to throw dust in the es of the people. he tariff is good enough as it is, Senator Hanna. We deny that the Dingly tarifi sede and shelters trusts.—Revised publican platform in Speaker Hen- son’s district. et well enough alone.—Aii the y organs. 'o these declaraticns all the great Pets and monopolies subscribe. he average Dingley duty of 45 cent on iron and steel products is ood enovgh” for the Steel Corpo- jon, Its annual dividends of 0,000,000 are “well enough” for who share them, ‘ Behe prohibitive Dingley duties on itle, beef, sheep, mutton, eggs and other food products are “good mough” for the beef combine and meat merger. Whe Dingley duties on sugar, that ethe trust a monopoly of our ket and enhance the price far e the cost of sugar in England Europe, are “well enough” for trust and it in political stock- iGlders, jut— re these laws and the conditions ich they invite and the monopo- A 6 which they protect“‘good enough” the people? This is the ‘‘para- ant question” to be answered by voters this year.—N. Y. World. ‘appiness depends very much on condition of the liver and kid- 8. The ills of life make but little ression on those whose digestion ood. You can regulate yourliver kidneys with Herbine and enjoy th and buoyancy of spirits. e, 50 cents —H. L. Tucker. . Baer, spokesman of the coal , says he “won’t answer Mit- .” That has been the attitude the self-appointed ‘trustees of idence” from the beginning. p won’t make concessions,” ‘“‘we ’t arbitrate,” “we won’t discuss issues,” “we won’t allow outsid- o question our right to do as we se with railroads and mines,” hing but “we won’t” from the The coal trust may take that ion if he chooses, but it will to take the consequences also. ently the people will have some- to say.—Philadelphia North can A Blind Candidate. ‘ of the First legisla- trict of the city of St. Louis D OCI % Money to loan on real besa Pat low rates. Abstracts of jes always on hand and for sale, Pano om titles examined and all kinds of real estate ft The Iesue-to-a-Nutebell_| PERCIVAL, 3UTLER, MO. | J. O.OLABRE, ce-Pres't. Oashier OUNTY BANK, NTY NATIONAL BANE. eneral Banking . Ogtsiness Transacted nvestment Co., = $60,000. in Bates county. Choice Abstracts of title Battles Fought on Sunday. It is part of the irony of things | that Sunday has been the day of some of the most important battles. Waterloo was fought on Sunday; so was Inkerman, The French Terror of 1794 began on Sunday and it was on the same day that the Indian mu- tiny broke out. Ramillis, Marlbor- ough’s great victory, was a Sunday! battle, and it was on Sunday that the Russtans carried Kars by assault in 1877. The battle of Vimiera took place on the first day of the week; so did Oudenards and Malplaquet. | In anaemia and most women’s ail- ments the digestion is weak, the making of color, flesh and strength out of food, is imperfect so that the patient is weak, wan, nervous and dyspeptic. This condition can_be corrected by taking a courss of Her- bine. Price, 50 cents.—H. L. Tucker. Burnedjan Editor in; Effigy. Manhattan, Kan., Oct. 11.—Nine hundred students from the Kansas State Agricultural college marched | down Main street last night, and,: stopping in ove of the principal streets, burned in effigy J. K. Davis, | editor of the Manhattan Mercury. An attack was made upon Prof. E.) R. Nichols in last issues of his paper. No opposition was offered by the police force. After the burning the | students marched} down the street cheering tor Prof. Nichols. Corn-huskers’ sprained wrists, bar- bed-wire cuts, burns, bruises, severe | lacerations and external injuries of any kind are promptly and happily cured by applying Ballard’s Snow Liniment. Price, 25 and 50 cents.— H. L. Tucker. Investigation to Be Secret. London, Oct. 11.—The first sitting of the Royal Commission appointed to inquire into the conduct of the South African war was held yester- day under the presidency of Lord Elgin. Much dissatisfaction was caused by the decision of the com- mission to exclude the press, the gen- }Carnegie to found the Carnegie insti- e {to their assistance, Carnegie Offers Scientists Big Fund to Discover Secret. Apparatus of the Most Delicate Kind to Be F vided in the Effort to Learn Origin of Living Things. Andrew Carnegie will use part of his great wealth to try to wrest from nature her secret of secrets—the orig- in, cause and principle of life. Out of the $10,000,000 given by Mr. tution at Washington “to encoura investigation, r search and discovery, ;a large sum has been set aside for the j : ‘ construction, equipment and endow- ment of the finest biologicaldaborator- ies in the world, Several Chicago scientists who have ‘made international reputations will find private laboratories and quarters provided for them, embracing every | acility for working at the problem tificial reproduction of proto- plasm. The marine biological laboratory at Wood's Hole, Mass., has been chosen as the foundation for the new institution, The group of scientists, who fdr sev- eral years have labored to establish | an independent laboratory for investigation at Wood's Hole, have in that time produced world startling results. as there that Dr, Jacques Loeb, of the University of Chicago, first found that unfertilized sea urchin eggs could be developed by chemical process, It was at Woods Hole, also, | that Dr, Albert P, Matthews, also of the University of Chicago, performed | the experiments that convinced him | that the phem®mena of life were elec: | trical, ientists from nearly every univer- sity in America have begun to turn to Wood's Hol the most promising of biological centers, ‘They sought in | vain for endowment, but the trustees of the Carnegie institution have come | i} The laboratories, which are to be} built on the rocks facing the Elizabeth | islands, are to contain everything that | the scientists can wish to aid them. | The most delicate of electrical appar- atus will be supplied. The department | of physiological chemistry will be es- + pecially well provided for, Each of the investigators will have a private laboratory for his work, and each will be able to draw on the endowment fund to carry on his work. Scholarships will be provided to en- able promising students to carry on their work there, Dr, Whitman, head | of the biological department of the! University of Chicago, will remain at the head of the Woou’s Hole school. COBRA EATS SNAKE, Voracious Reptile at the Philadelphia Zoo Fights with Female, Then Devours Another, A large Indian cobra at the Phila- delphia Zoological gardens, grew ac- tive and voracious the other day after shedding his skin and quickly ate up one of his companions. ‘The battle started after the noon- day feeding time. The larger of the two cobras struck at the female, coiled around her neck, and finally broke her back. Then, when she had been vebbed of her strength, calmly began to gulp down the reptile. Keeper Hess interfered with an iron bar and succeeded in forcing the ferocious snake to disgorge the half- swallowed female. Then in blind fury the cobra struck at another smaller snake that just then raised its head. The large mouth of the cobra closed over the smaller snake's head, and while it struggled and coiled around the tree in the cage it was slowly pulled off by the cobra and gulped down, inch by inch. The swelling along the cobra’s body showed the other snake gliding into the monster. INDIGNITY TO SUICIDE BODY. Harsh Method Suggested by Southern Minister to Cheek the Mania for Self Destruction, c Indignities to the bodies of suicides as a means of checking self-destruc- tion was suggested by Rev. W. F. Lloyd, a leading Methodist minister of Louis- ville, Ky., in a sermon the other Sun- day. “There are many people,” said he, “who would dread the infamy of such indignity much more than they eral opinion being expressed by the Pall Mall Gazette, which says: “The presence of reporters is neces- sary to assure a full and fair investi- gation.” To Cure a Cold in One Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tab- lets. All druggists refund the money if it fails to cure. E. W. Grove’s sig nature is on each box. 25c. Kept It Secret a Year. Columbia, Mo., Oct. 18.—The mar- riage is announced of Prof. M. 8. King, formerly instructor of book- keeping in the University of Missouri, and Miss Mary Iglhart, formerly stenographer in the office of Presi- dent Jesse. The marriage took place overa year ago, but has just become known. : Le i on every box of the genuine _| the remedy that cures © cold tn one day = . . fear to violate God’s law, and they accordingly would be deterred. Again, I ask, should not those who attempt suicide and fail be restrained of their liberty? In some way we must bring about a revolution of sentiment, and instead of commiserating the suicide he should be condemned and execrated in the strongest terms.” German Honor for Ohio Girl, Jane B. Sherrer, an American girl, a native of Franklin, 0., has been granted the degree of doctor of phi- losophy by the Berlin university. She received the degree of A. B., from the University of Michigan in 1893. Previ- ous to that time she taught school at Oxford, O., and Jackson, Ill., At the present time there are only four wom- en doctors of philosophy of Berlin uni- versity and three of these are Amer- icans, Less Apt to Be Brutal, Pro?. E. Benjamin likes football, says the Chicago Record-Herald, but hould married. Birthright for a Girl, The crown prince, we hope, says the Chicago Tribune, did not throw his birthright in the face of the kaiser, {the courts. Mr, - TO AID NATURALIZATION. New System of Immigration Bureaa WII Simplify Steps of Foreigners in Becoming Citizens, An important part in the naturali- zation of aliens will be taken by the immigration i bureau, from the adoption of a system for keeping a record of the neweomers. rhis system will simplify the work of the courts, will prevent frauds in the se- curing of citizenship, and will tend to improve the character of those who contemplate becoming natural- ized. : 4 Commissioner General Sargent has instructed the collectors at the vari- resulting ous ports to inaugurate a card sys- tem, which will show when the im- mi nt arrives, from where he his destination, and other in- formation which will enable the ernment to keep track of him, W immigrants apply for naturalization the court before which they appear will call on the immigration bureau for mation in ative to their cha arrival and other d S possession rel+ acter, the time of a. This will be furnished and will enable the court to reach a decision in the matter, Congress has authorized the keep» ing of the card system, but it has not yet given authority to the courts to call for it, but the immigration of+ ficials stand ready to coo; te with Sargeatewill ry mend in his next report that ss enact legislation nece formally put this information disposal of the court, CROSS OCEAN IN SMALL BOAT. ne eons ry to ut the Capt, Newman and Son Succeed in Reaching Falmouth From New York City, Capt. Newman and his son Edward have arrived at Falmouth, England, in the 88-foot kerosene launch, Abiel Abbott Low, in which they sailed from New York. In an interview Capt. Newman said: “The launch has proved herself a noble bout, but we experienced awful times since we left New York, Several times, in terrible gales, we nearly lost our drag anchor, owing to the gear chafing away. We voyaged 3,103 miles, We had great trouble with the kero- sene, because the tanks which held it broke and the oil flooded the cabin, My boy became ill and homesick. L suffered greatly from exposure and long sitting in one position, We spoke the American line steamer Kroonland in mid-Atlantic, After this we encoun- tered a series of most severe gales, and the hardships were so great that 1 feared we would not survive. We did not speak another vessel until we met a fisherman 90 miles off the Sicily islands, Those last 90 miles were the longest I ever ran in my life. I would rt hesitate, however, to try the voy- The voyagers rarely used the sail on the launch, Capt. Newman lost 30 pounds in weight on the trip, but his son seems to have derived benefit from the experience. SURGEON TO PRESIDENT. Dr, G, A, Lung, of the United States Navy, Assigned to Look After Roosevelt's Health, Dr. George Augustus Lung, sur- geon, United States navy, has been eelected by the navy department for duty as surgeon to the president, to succeed Dr. John F. Urie, who was made assistant chief of the bureau of meticine and surgery, Dr. Lung was born in New York, and entered the naval service in 1583. His excel- lent record and active service come mended him to the navy departinent for his new assignment. He was with the naval expedition to Samoa in 1599, when a number of Ameritan seamen lost their lives in in attack upon hostile natives. His gallant work with that sdition earned tor him a special letter from Secretary Long complimenting him upon his heroic attention to duty. He was later attached to the relief expedition to Peking and w spe cially commended for his excellent service. He is now on waiting or- ders in New York, having been de- tached from active service last De- cember, American Army Engineers Prove Dise puted Territory Never Belonged to Great Britain, Skaguay advices say the questi of the destruction of the old Russi monument in the disputed territory between Alaska and British Yukon has been settled. Lieut. Owens had found two monu- ments in perfect repair and definitely located the place where a third one had been destroyed. Owens also found an old stormhouse on the summit. This was called the boundary house when the Russians occupied the country. This establishes beyond all doubt that the Russians did occupy the terri- tory now disputed and that the boun- where the Americans claim it to be, Wed and Build Their Tombs. Among the August weddings record- ed in Milford, Pa., was that of George Gledhill, 60 years old, and Anna Mayo, 76 years old. The aged couple had been admirers of each other for dec- ades, but it was not until their old age that they decided to marry. Mr. Gled- hill is now spending his spare time building a mausoleum for himself and ; —He-has-already. prepared the tombs, and has them suitably in- seribed with headstones, with the names of himself and’wife. The graves are within a stone’s throw of their home. creal sive sores and eruptions, catarrh of the How any disease lurking in your system, healthy children ? mankind healthier and happier. There is no remedy that so surely by both old and young without fea skin diseases, CASTORIA. For Infants and Children, The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of y Not a Cent in lt For Bryan, Lincoln, Neb,, Oct. 18 —For the first time W. J. Bryan enters a pub- | lic disclaimer to the repeated charge | that he exacts compensation for | political speeches, In the fortheom- | ing issue of the Commoner he denies | the statement of the Missouri State | Republican of St, Louis that he re- | ceived 35,000 for his speeches in that state, Mr Bryan calls the charge | “inexcusable mendacity,” and says that not only did he refuse pay, but he paid his own expenses. He also says: ‘Mr, Bryan's income is deriv- ed from h’s pen and he has time er - ough left to devote nearly two months of this year to campaign speeches and for these speeches he not only receives no pay, but for the most part he pays his own expenses and does not ride on passes either, He is interested in what he advo- eates, During the past #ix years he has given more than $19,000 to various campaign committees, be- sides devoting a considerable portion of each year to political speeches, de- livered without compensation in dif- ferent parts of the country.” Stops the Cold and Works off the Cold. Laxative Bromo-Quinine Tablets? cure a cold in one day. No cure, no | pay. Price 25 cents. It Looks Bad For Tom Horn, Cheyenne, Wyo., October 18.—The | coilis tightening about Tom Horn, | the stock detective, who is on trial | here charged with the murder of Willie Nickell, a 14-year-old boy, in the iron country. The state has | produced five witnesses who heard | Hornadmit the killing and twomore | will give similar testimony. Deputy United States Marshal Joe Lafors tes- | tified to Horn’s confession made tohim in which Horn not only admit- ted the Nickell killing, but three oth- ers as well. The testimony of the | confession has been corroborated by other witnesses, Small Hope For Andrews. Detroit, October 18.—Frank (C, Andrews, convicted for wrecking the City Savings bank by appropriating overa million of its funds, may be admitted to bail for $100,000, ae- cording to a decision of the supreme court at Lansing to-day. The court ordered a careful approval of the sureties. Andrews, who is in the coutty jail here, states he cannot furnish such a large amount and the opinion is that he will be compelled in fifteen days to begin his fifteen years’ sentence in Jackson prison. kansas Coal Miners Strike. Parsons, Kan., Oct. 18.—Seven 3 It is the right of every child to be well Parents parents it must look for happiness. \ How incon- ceivably great \ responsibility, and how important that no taint of disease is left in the blood troubles as S. S. S. poisons, and removes every taint from the blood, and builds up the general health, If weaklings putting them ona course of S. S. S. at once. It is a purely vegetable medicine, harmless in its effects, and can be taken jIniles south of this city, ‘hundred men stopped to-day at the ‘coal mines of the Southwestern Im- | provement Company at Mineral, near dary line, according to the treaty, is | here, As the strike is sympathetic, there may be further trouble. The miners struck, because the company refused to pay the engineers accord- ing to the union scale. The mines are controlled by the Missouri, Kansas and Texas Rail- way. “C” With a Tail. The “C” with a tail is the trade- mark of Cascarets Candy Cathartic. Look for it on the light blue enameled metal box! Each tablet stamped C.C.C. Never sold in bulk. All druggists, roc. bern, and to the health and is the parents’ :\| if , f Sea WL to be transmitted to the helpless child, entailing the most pitiable suffering, and marking its little body with offen- nose and throat, weak eyes, glandular swellings, brittle bones, white swelling and deformity. can parents look upon such little sufferers and not reproach themselves for bringing so much misery into the world? If you have how can you expect well developed, Cleanse your own blood and build up your health, and you have not only enlarged your capacity for the enjoyment of the pleasures of life, but have discharged a duty all parents owe to posterity, and made reaches deep-seated, stubborn blood It searches out even hereditary are growing up around you, right the wrong by. of any bad results. Write us about your case, and let our physicicns advise and help you, This will cost you nothing, and we will also send our book on blood and « THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga. A Meteor Fell Near Joplin. Joplin, Mo, Oct, 18,—A meteor bes lieved to be one that Kansas City and Cherokee, Kan, last night, fell to the ground about fifteen It passed directly over this city going in a southerly direc ion and those who was visible in ;sawitsay it was barely above the | house tops and brilliantly illuminat- ed the heavens. Word reached here to-day that it had fallen south of here near the Kansas line, but that it had not yet been found. Those who heard it fall here distinctly felt the shock, as it shook the houses and windows and doors rattled. At the time many thought it was an ex- plosion at theanines, We have seen the frail infant when the faint struggle for existence seem. ed almost ended, resuscitated and made strong by the use of White's Cream Vermifuge, Price, 25 cents,— H. L. Tucker. To Unite the Two Churches. Memphis, Mo,, Oct, 18.—The most important question before the Pres- byterian synod of Missouri here, in its second day’s session, was a pro- posed union between the Lresbyte- rian churelLand the Dutch Reformed Church of America, The overture was defended by the Rev. 8. M. Neel, of Kansas City. Dr. J. F. Cannon, of st. Louis, Mo., opposed the move- ment. The synod decided to ask the generalassembly to take some action looking to this union. In the even- ing Dr. E. C. Gordon, of Lexington, Mo., spoke on “Christian Educa- tion,” A “stitch in time saves nine,” and adose of Ballard’s Horehound Syrup at the beginning of a cold will save you many weary hours andevendays of distressing and harassing cough. Price, 25 and 50 cents.—H. L. Tuck- er. Sent Her to an Asylnm. Eureka Springs, Ark., Oct, 1S.— Suit was tiled to-day by Mrs, Demars Barnes, of St. Louis, against her for, mer husband, Prof. C. M. Barnes, for $10,000 damages for alleged false incarceration in the Arkansas state asylum in 1808, The piaintiff farth- er petitions the court to set aside a divorce obtained shortly afterward by her husband through fraud, Prof, | Barnes, who is a well-known church leader and author of a sacred song book, now lives here with his second | wife, There are thousands of people, suf- fering untoid torture from piles, be- cause of the popular impression that they cannot be cured. ‘Labler’s Buck- eye Pile Ointment will cure them and the patient will remain cured. Price, 50 cents in bottles. Tubes, T5 cents. —H. L. Tucker. They Were Married in a Buggy. Keota, Mo., Oct. 18.—John Mas- sengale, a wealthy stock raiser of Macon county, and Mrs. arlee Mas- sengule, of Keota, were married yes- terday, while seated in a buggy in front of the store owned by the otfi- ciating minister, the Rey, I’, Theo. Mayhew, near Bevier. Mr. Massen- yale was a bachelor, 60 years old. The bride is the widow of the groom's cousin and is 41. Caught Him in California. Los Angeles, Cal., Oct. 18.—Robert Hutton, wantedin EldoradoSprings, Mo., it is alleged, on a charge of forg- ery, has been arrested here. The prisoner admits that he is the man wanted. He will be held until the arrival of a Missouri officer. Boars the of

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