The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, November 20, 1902, Page 6

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AS a HANNA TO QUIT POLITICS Ma a Candidate fer the Senate or Presidency Wa- N wber 15 —There o longer any question tor M. A. Hanna’s intention from public life at the close is apparently oft present term in the United States Senat It is stated today on the authority of a man who has the closest personal and political relations with the Ohio senator that candidate willnot, Mr. Hanna will not be for re-cleetion to the Senate: underany combination of conditions, be a candidate for the Republican forthe presidency in 1904 nominatio? and will not, if he ean possibly avoid it, continue as chairman of the Re- publican national committee after the meet of the Republican na- tional convention in 1904 Ever since the death of President MeKinley political gossip has been busy with Senator Hauna’s name in with the Republican presidentialnomination. Mr. Hanna conection refused to encourage this movement in his interest, although he never made any public declaration on the subject. It was diflicult to make the country believe that he was not plan ning to secure the nomination in 1904, and there was great specula- tion as to how far he would go in us- ing the organization of the party of which he was the head in farthering hisown candidacy, [tis no secret that certain Republican elements were and have at all times been fa- vorable to Mr) Hanna's candidacy, and that they have been, at least un- til quite recently, persistently work- ing to secure the defeat of Mr, velt and the nomination of Senator Thana lt must be said to theeverlasting credit of Senator Hanna that he has hadno part and lent no countenance to these plans of his admirers, Tis record iu the Senate last winter convili oof of his loyalty to Witvin the hist week Senator Han- mala ade the emphatic statement to one of his confidential personal aad political friends that he will not ate for the presidential tuted that Ith more Dea ennai hominationin 104 He he valued bis life and his he: than he cid any politieal prefertient He said that the two qational cam paisa tie hed aeaged as cherie of the national committee had done more to break down his health than had twenty years of anactive bus’ ness life. Senator Hanna told of his experience in the campaign just clos ed in which he was compelled on sev- eral oceasions to accept help in leav- ing the platform at the close of an address. Tle said that he wasso con. stituted that he-conld-not-take-o complacent part in the campaign, Lut wave up all his time to it, became Nery ost sleep and kept in the fight until he collapsed. The sena tors i positive terms that he could not and would not allow his; name to be used as a candidate for the Republic sn presidential nomina- tion in 1904, nor would he seek a re election CHOLERA IN MAMLA | the Disease, | | Manila, November 12 —Cholera tity small fish, All applicants wl] has broken out in the Sth infantry, which is quartered in Manila. Six enlisted men have already died froin | ths disease and a dozen others are | ill. Cholera has reappeared ut Mara- | quina, seven miles from here, along | the river shed which supplies Manila with water. Orders have been issued | re-establishing a military quarantine to guard the sources of supply and} prevent the water from becoming in- fected. It is doubted that the re erudescence of the disease in Manila | will prove serious. | The supreme court has affirmed the conviction, of Vincente Vuldsz, the Spanish editor, who was found | guilty of libeling Commissoners Le! Gardi and Tavera, Filipino members | of the Philippine commission. Tle court orders that the accused be banished from he isxlinds for four years Valdez fled to Chitin amonth ager while he was out on bail pen « ing the trial of the appeal to che su- preme court, > wind Gen. Miles arrived at DT ilo on Tuesday. There wis a reeption ond batquet in bis honor on thar nigh: Gen. Miles made a speech of sya pathy with the people in iueir suffer. ings through war aud the cholera epidemic, A further decline in silver has com- pelled the goverument to make the 50 for $1 of gold. rate was $2.40 tu $1. The cheapening of silver has result- ed in concluding the losses of the The old government and all other holders of} The instability of the present | silver. currency is seriously damaging busi ness, and the members of the civil commission and representatives of commercial interests on the islands will unite in making a strong plea to Congress. Pigskin Grafted on Girl. Richmond, Va, Nov. 8.—Her own mother and relatives having declined to make the necessary sacrifice to save her life, the skin of a young pig was this afternoon grafted on™ he back of a 10-year old girl to cover aspot 15 inches in diameter. Some weeks ago the clothing of the girl took fire and she was frightfully burned. Stuart McGuire, who is a son of Doctor Hunter McGuire, Stonewall Jackson’sa surgeon, idea of using the cuticle of a young and tender pig, The operation was performed this afternoon, A small black pig was chloroformed into in- sensibility, the bristles were shaved from theskin and with his keen lancet the young surgeon removed it in strips. conceived the Theskin was laid on in small pieces until it covered the bare space. The result of this novel method of aiding nature will not be known for several dav. . The Trials Cost 1-2 Million, New York, Nov, 15.—The trial of Roland B, Molineux for the murder of Mra, Adams has cost more than any other for a capital offense inany country where the English system of jurisprudence is in vogue. The cost York in the tirst trial amounted to 4 million dol- lars, ‘This was expended largely in fees for handwriting experts, who to the county of New were brought from distant experts, stutesand for detectives whoendeay- ored to trace Molineux’s movements irom his fifteenth birthday to the time of his arrest, pended about $75,000 in the first trial and it is estimated that the total on both sides for the two hear milion dollars Molineux was acquitted yesterday ofthe murder of Mrs Adams. He Was cheered as he left the court room He isu free man for the first time in nearly four years, ‘Phe jury was out twenty minutes. The defense ex ings is Many people are suffering fearfully from indigestion or dyspepsia, when one single bottle of Herbine would bring about a prompt and perma- nent cure. A few doses will do more fora weak stomach than a prolonged course of any Other medicine. Price, 50 ceuts.—H L Tucker. “Fisht Fish! Orvice Sr, Josern, Mo, Nov. 7, 1902 All persons in the State of Missouri desiring young croppie or black bass, for ponds, lnkes and streams, should apply at their earliest convenience to Phil, Kopplin, Jr, Superintendent Forest Park Hatchery, Forest Park, St. Louis, My, or to'M. E. O’Brien, Soperintendent St. Joseph Hatchery, the one most accessible to the appli- appli cant. The only expense of | What the Armies of the World Have Accomplished During Last Year. Comprehe Issued by the Government—Special Inter- est Centers on the Best Type of Field Gun, sive Volume Stored with complete and interest- ing information concerning cverf branch of every army in the world, and replete with fine illustrations and maps, “Notes of Military Inter- est for 1901,” made public recently by Lieut. Col, W. A. Simpson; chief of the military information division, is one of the best volumes of its kind ever issued from the war depart ment, ‘ The matter was compiled and ar-} ranged by Capt. E, A, Edwards, Twenty-fifth infantry; Capt. 4d. 8 Herron, Second cavalry; First Lieut. H. B. Ferguson, corps of engincers, and Second Lieut. R. S. Clark, of the Ninth infantry, with the of they y attaches at the vari- ous foreign capitals. The first pages of the volume are dé¢voted to the military bu ts of the various countries for 19 with interesting comments and compari- sons, The organization of military establishments is then taken up, and} the changes in the make-up of the} British, Ruesian, Swedish, Servian, | Srazilian and Argentine armies are dealt with at length. Of especial interest, in view of the] efforts of the United States army | to settle upon a type of field gun, is the chapter upon field g It is pointed out that there are ¥| two general types of modern field! assistance gins--namely: Gans on rigid ca riages and guns with recoil devices on the iages, and it is stated that neither of these types has yet ob-) tained u | MILITARY PROGRESS. | BETTER FEELING: IN NAVY. Causes of Dissatisfaction | | Officers and Me Action of Se Among a by retary Mocdy. Ix Remove Secretary Moody has ordered the re- moval of the causes of dissat ‘tion among the officers and men of the North At + squadror ere has been a general demoralization, and dee ser > were so frequent as to cause} t there was someth with the enlisted person- nel was demonetrated by the large number of desertions during the last | few months, The burean of navig has now completed the inves | of complaints, and while no one will admit there wes cause for them, it is} said cheerfulness now pervades the} crews and that desertions are decreas- ing. At one time some officers on duty at the navy department were of the opinion that the recent suicides of offi- cers in the squadron were due. to some general cause, but they are now sate isfied the causes were individualin each j case of self-destruction and were apart from the life on shipboard, It is said that ever since the United navy was established it hae been cum tomary to give liberty at least one day in the week to the enlisted men of ships at home ports. The rule worked excec y well, The: men were willing to perform their duties to the best of their ability and with -s throughout the week if they had before them the prospect of being permi Tto go ashore at the end, It is understood, however, that the inve: ation ‘lored that this rule was not observed in the North tie squadron; that there was no f routine, with considerable dcitional duties and consequent loss of sleep entailed by the squadron ex- nd that the men beceme surly over the fact that they were kept con- stantly on shipboard with the shore in sight. A great many “greenhorns” have been enlisted in the service recently, cheerful cessation ¢ ercises, limous preference. The re fire is not ol a carriy test possible rapidity of | tined with the guns on! but they possesy tages in murked adv siimplic strength and lightness of mater and their faults are stated to be the failure of maintain the exact first firing position and the the carriage to uncertain action of the spade in hard ground, With the recoil eur guns, which gun to the original firing position, rr obtained, bat the weapon has its disadvantage mechanism returns the greut idity of fire in the way of complexity of mechian- ism, ir “dd weight and liability | to fatal injury in action, | \s yet France and Germany are | the only countries whose artiller | with rapid-fir nee uses a gun with! fs actually field guns. re » Germany uses the » type, and Russia, | Ttaly, Belgium and Sweden have also | adopted the with rigid car- riiges. Norway has adopted a‘gun of the recoil typ chases a armed I guns and Spain has pur- of both types, In the new, Japanese field gun, it is stated, the recoil seems to be taken up on the carriage. broad assortment A NERVY ENGINEER. Ine Presence of Mind in Pace of Great | Danger Saves the 500 Passe ers who were e Wabash roa Clark + » Webash and the Some sir Was ¢on- sider nly 4 | tion of the portraits by the e on the! Russian and the it is safd, found the life so en ly different from what they ex- pected it to be that many of them de- at the first opportunity, Ane rte cause of dissatisfaction, accord: t the srfort report, Was t men were n duties Id have been at some subse ent ne nes of this sort, it . produced much bad feeling the men T even to some exe tent among the o ON EXHIBITION TO PUBLIC. Chartran’s Portraits of Mes, and Miss Roosevelt Are Placed in the Corcoran Gallery, Chartran’s portrait of Mrs, Roose- velt and Miss Roosevelt, painted in Washington li ad which for the spring salon ishington at the Cor allery, where they are being viewed by hundreds of per- sons. After the portraits were fin- ished the French ambassador, M. Cam- bon, had them placed in the ballroon: at the embassy and invited several hundred persons to an afternoon tea to vee them. The general public, however, was not invited, and is now seeing ‘the por- trait. icy the first time. A presenta- French Was the parting courtesy M. Cambon just before going to ous to his reeall, ion has been made in the for hanging these only place suitable, so cot arrangement is con all of the colonial and in the he latter is ner government por- uy hall, next to 1 long upper corriacrs F Iways, and is | likely ¢ public v east of liammond, then he ce ! cf se \ short Cistanee out of Clark the} the pletures. Wabash Calumet} No portrait of re rresiden he river ov rk bric white house has vet been pe a Ge inter] ef dent's friends, ¢ the pre Promotes Digestion. Cheerful- ness and Rest.Contains neither Opium,Morphine nor Mineral. NoT NARCOTIC. Bieri tata ¢ | Fa lied ka, Aperfect Romedy for Constipa- || tion, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea |! Worms Convulsions Feverish- |{ ness and LOSS OF SLEEP. NEW YORK. _ Fac Simile Signature of | Sern or ph Seber & TF Missouri Pacific Railway Time Table ; at Butler Station, | WORTH BOUND No St Leniamatl . PR. No 26 Kanena City express a}. Yo 24 St Loute exprees P Y.! No. 104 Local Freight... SP.M. sorty Ronen, | Yo. 98 St Lonic & Joplin ‘Uimited) 608 POM, | Yo. 7 Kansas City & fonlin mail r.¥.! No 2) Kansas Clty & Joplin expr, On| Yo 10! Loca) Fretgnt...... . P.M, INTESTATE DIVISIO No, sl Ruther & Madiann Depart Aw So, 1e2 Butler & Madison Arrive. 1'5 A. bh, £. 0, Vawpunvoonr, Agent, K, GC. Pittsburg & Gulf Time Table. | Arrival and departure of trains at Worland. NOWTH WOUND No. 1 Kansas City daily Kxpress “. io No.8 = souTH ROUND, No. 2? Through Port Arthur Express,' . No. 4 Siloam Springs WUxpress...... 18:20pm Remember this ts the popular short line be- sween Kanene City, Mo., and Pittsburg, Kan., Toplin. Mo . Neosho, Mo | Sniphur Springe Ark Stloam Springs, Ark., and the direc’ ronte from the south to St Lonts, Chicago, and points north and northeast and to Denver, Ogden San Francisco, Portland and pointe wast and northwest. No exponee har beer spared to make the passenger squipmen' ¢ thie Une senond to none inthe west Tress via the new line A.C Orn Gen’) Pane Agt. KananeMity, Me. P.L. Payne, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Oftice over Nichols’ Shoe Store, Fast Side Square. Residence on Ghio street, 2nd door east of West School building south side. 6-tf OR. H. M. CANNON, DENIS. VETLER, MO Witt vein Adrian overs Toesday and Friday prepared to 0 af! kinds ot tal work, S.A. FOF, M.D Ear, Kye, Nose anc Throat Speclaliat. DR- CHRISTY & ROE. Office The Over Butler Cash Depart ment Store, Rutler, Mo (M9@ Telovhone 20, . Talenbone 16, . BOULWARE, IL Mofuitet: won Diseases of women and Chiltien a specialty, None a - Loantwill be the cost-ebesrHttarrtth pane Tet patr Six Men of the Fifth Infantry Die of) which mist be sent in sdvanee, the, the Wabash limi jexpress charges to be paid 6. O D,| As thet A tive gallon can will carry thirty to be notified in advance of shipment If more than one can is desired revit accordingly. F.2D. Yenawixe, Presi tent. CSCASTORIEA. Boars the The Kind You 4 we Alweys Bought Signature Toa f-.. of George W. Moody of Texas Dead. Fl Paso, Tex . Nov. 8.—George W, | - Moody is dead at Kerrville, He was forty five years a resident of Texas anda frontiersman well known for ‘his bravery and eccentricities. He eame here from Kentucky dor ing the Civil War, when he purchased commissary supplies for the Confed- eraey, He vowed that if the cause of the Sonth was lost he would never jent his hair, and he kept the vow, although 83 years of age. A year ago he killed Kid Wingate in self de- fense He said he wonld live to see him-elf exonerated He was acquit- _ ted ot the trial this week and two. ants later died, although sick but two days preceding his death. “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. i left Clark sts card nearly 500 sof the strue- lumet the en- of timbers van of the bridge sank rine, souls, re Jas the beneat his e throitte te trestlework. | pends on Sarger He opened the! the faythest limit. and the train fairly leaped from the swaying | WANTS E: LE IN SCHOOLS. Methodist W an's Home Mission= ary Society Adopts Resolutions to That Effect, The Woman's Home Missionary so- ciety of the Methodist piscopal church in session at Kansas City, Mo., the other day started a movement to HOAR *R) T ON MOON. Harvard Astronomer Cinims the Re= cent Eelinse Gave Proof of His Pet Theory, Substantiation of important facts s obtained by Harvard's astronom- iexl authorities in their observations of the lunar eclipse the other night. The facts concerned themselves prin- cipally with the crater Linne, and were carried on by Prof. W. H. Pickering. Pref. Pickering with a micrometer refully measured the area around the crater before and after the eclipse and confirmed all his past interpreta- ‘ tions that the bright spot grew notice- ably in area during the time of maxi- muin darkness, Tiekering has always maintained that the light from the spot is that of hoar frost. The fact that the spot ory. He is now practically settled upon that peint and hopes with this as a stares te work ont a pet theory of {his own concerning the earth’s big t eatellire. ' Vore Expensive Than Aato, A Kansas City dtiver has béen fined | $500 for beating and kicking his horve tecesth. low y. says the Chicago Recvord-Veveid, the fellow. fo yet an | evtomobite Ber tite, . grew perceptibly larger when the | The only dividend the home is expeet- fun's heat was cut off that night|ed to pay to the stockh Peontirms Pickertgs betel ii his the-|comfortakle feeling of a good work have the Bible placed in the publie schools in this country. The fohowing resolution was adopted: “Whereas, It shduld be the leading aim of our public schools to develop character fit for citizenship in a Chris tian republic; therefore, be it “Resolved, That we will use every endeavor to secure moral instruction and the responsive reading of Serip- tural selections in our publie schools,” The resolution was presented by Mrs, Mary Hickman, who said the publie schools of Cleveland a short time ago began the study of the book of Psalms, the Ten Commandments and the Lord’s prayer, and that all publie schools in the country should ‘adopt the same plan. Home for Working Girls, | Recently there was opened in Bos- ton by a corporation of benevolent persons a home for working girls, ‘sis the , Well accomplished. Whatever surplus the small rates charged may cause to -accumulate will be-used in adding to the comforts of the home. Already | for the payment of $3.50.a week a girl j may get room. board, heat, use of the gymnasium. of the library and of the dance hall. in addi- tion to the services of a physician and free adwhission to a course of enter | ‘#inments given by the inetitntinns. ching, light, | : « Surgeon. Office vorte side squar ‘er Mo. Meeasesof vomenand chi n a specialty. DR. J. T. AULL , Bears the . Signature Peeape of Otel Dr SURUELPISCHER Pangan Seca > Ax. Seana + ral Rochelle Seite > | | Anite Seed + i \4 ws U 1h Pad wv" For Over’ THE CRMTAUR COMPANY, MEW YORK CITY, Lilla Qe fd The Best is the Cheapest. Not how cheap but how good is the question. The Twice-n Week Republie is not as cheap as some so-called newspa- pers, but it is ascheap asit is possible to sell a first-class newspaper. I prints all the news that is wo: printing. If you read it all the round you are posted on all the im- portant and interesting affairs of the world, It is the best and most reli- able newspaper that money and brainscan produce—and those should be the distinguishing traits of a news- paper that is designed to be read by all members of the family. Subscription price, $layear. Any newsdealer newspaper or postmaster will receive your subscription or you may mail it direct to ‘Tue’ Repusuic, St. Louis, Mo WATCH SI. LOUIS, Thervreatestoworld’s frit tie world — has evr seen willbe held at St Louis in To keep in tere ith the wr ration-ter tins pI vor. 8 fas wltodet all the news ofal the earch o esos recdin ss eran shou dat once iecribe ter the newspaper of DEMOCRA t and alone St. Louis, the Tt sth. Pai ‘. vicun ie a eyes no ‘is circulation ex- ‘so and territory in the anion, te and Mexico, nid tooovery ponte’ the work where” there are readers of the English lan- puuge. Tt ovett to be in your home | during thee 1ming year. See adver- tisement ¢isewhere in this issue, 18-6t GLA emi Hever pers, equui or rival tends te: verysd DENTIST. Parlors Over Model Clothing Co, @ntrance same thatiesd: to Hagedorn’r studio. north side square § Entler, Mo, nuexeve PILE OINTMENT | CURES NOTHING BUT PILES A SURE and CERTAIN CURE ¥ > known for (5 yoers as tho J BEST REMEDY for PILES. § soup ny ALi pRUGorsTs. SE RE re Govrnicurs &c. ” enna

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