The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, November 27, 1902, Page 7

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When you need your buggy, carriage or spring Wagon repaired is Tr. Ww. LEGG, He cut up your axles and take out the wiggle wobble. He has just put in the best machine made for putting on RUBBER TIRES. e don’t know everything but WE KNOW THE BUGGY BUSINESS. We sell Buggy Tops, Dashes, Cushions, Shafts, Poles and the Best Paint on earth. East Room Iron Block. Southeast Corner Square, id CB OSE O54 OR Ooh Od OG Or Ont Ot Ong Orsi Ong CoG Ont On Ong c PPP L LPS RELL PPP INLLLE LLLP LLLP OLE LLLP OBE 8 we ?.3. TYGARD, HON.J. 8. NEWBEBRY, 3.C,OLARK, President. Vice-Pres't. Oashier THE BATES COUNTY BANK, BUTLER, mo. Suocessor to BATES COUNTY NATIONAL BANK, Estancisuep Dro,, 1870, } CAPITAL, $76,000. -} A General Banking Business Transacted ? Bates County Investment Co, BUTLER, MO Oapital, = = 850,000. Money to loan on real estate, at low rates. Abstracts of title to all lands and town lots in Bates county. Choise securities always on hand and forsale, Abstractsof title * furnished, titles examined and all kinds of real estate papers drawn, ¥. J. Tyoanp, Hon. J. R. Newaeury, President, Vice-President, Jno. CO. Hans, Abstractor Bch Doe a J.C. Ouanx, Seo’y, & Trens, , A ERR FLR ALARA PADI PAPS ARORA RA ON TRUST CO. . _ OF BUTLER MISSOURI. Capital, Surplus and Profits . : $68,300.00, Always has ready woney on hand to beloaned on farme in Bates, Vernon and Barton counties, Missouri, at the Very Lowest Rates of Interest. Every land owner wanting a loan should call and get our rates before borrowing of others. We have a full and complete abstract of title to every acre of land or town lot in Bates County from the U. 8. patent down to date, that we keep up with the records daily. We furnish reliable Abstracts at reasonable prices, Interest Paid on Time Deposits. —— DIRECTORS. J, Everingham, Wu. W. Trigg, Booker Powell, C. R. Radford, Sam Levy, T. J. Wright. Wm. E, WALTON, PREs, Wm. E. Walton, John Deerwester, Frank M. Voris, O. H. Dutcher, FRANK ALLEN, Sxcy. J.R, Jenkins, T. C. Boulware, PRR Ot ne RRR AEM He CRE ORS A AKRRRAR oe wre ewe os | RRR RRP PRP RPRLRLPPLP PAPLPLPLPLLPBRPRPRLPPLPBA PLP PPR ik FOR A PICTURE HAT. THREE SHOT TO DEATH. | Woman at St. Joseph is Sent to | Mexicans Executed on Spot Where They penitentiary in Record-Break- Had Murdered an Englishman. ing Time. Mexico City, November 21.—On he oseph, Mo., Nov. 20—Eftie| the spot where, two years ago, they Mes ison her way to the state| murdered Robert Remmet, an En- nit ntiary, Elsie Saunders mourns | glishman, the manager of a mine, 8 of an eye and the shortest! three Mexicans were chot to death, ‘$n recordin Buchanan county | and their accomplices, nine in num- sbeen recorded. __; ber, sent to prison for long terms. is responsible for the loss of| In June, 1901, Robert Remmet, an ‘6 eye—and it was all because of | Englishman, and the manager of nday hat. mines near Zacualpan, in the state of Uftie betook herself to a local mil-| Mexico, was killed in his own house fy establishment last Saturday | by a band of robbers, who knew that urchased a hat—a dream she | he and his wife, with a considerable it. Effie calls herself a creole | amount of money and jewels, intend- ys she knows a good hat when | ed to depart next day for England. one. There were twelve men in the band. has never reached the creole | They went to Remmet’s house, which Ashe is a plain mulatio, not so | was in a solitary place, and found Nook: ng as her fairer friend.|the Englishman in bed, He heard , too, knows a good hat when | the noise and told his wife to hide her jewels. He then admitted the lay evening Elsie borrowed the | men and showed them a box contain- eadgear with which to deport |ing his money. The robbers took fn the sight of the man she/| the money and shot him dead in the The hat was not treated | presence of his wife. On pain of im je care which Effie thought it | mediate death Mrs. Remmet gave np There was a cold wave | her jewels. The men were about to re the storm, but in the tor- | kill Mrs. Remmet, but were frighten- that followed Elsie lost her eye | ed away and she escaped and hid in ) result of a stab with a com- | the woods until morning. knife. ph were arrested yesterday, but | over a year in tracking the robbers, pwas released. In the afternoon | all of whom were captured. They Was taken into the criminal | were given afair trial. The judge in }room and entered a plea of| the case was sent from this city, fto the charge of an assault | Gov. Villada of the state of Mexico intent to.kill. put forth special efforts in the mat- el sentenced her to two | ter. the penitentiary and she was reat once by Sheriff Spen- Is Golf Catching onto poosiee favor? It seems tobe. A not killer comes from gold districts. The reasou for this is clear, as Da- vis’ Painkiller is the oldest and best of common occurrence, either in vi The Mexican authorities havespent| &e"ealogist goes on to time the stock from which all the tree that thé emperor has streak of French blood derived from his mother’s side, his maternal ances ‘tors having included Charlotte of ble increase in sales of Pain-| 4¢s Mieres-Dollreuse. BEAUTIFUL BANNER. Falls Into the Hands of the Post | Office Authorities. Sent from Philippines to Address in Brooklyn, Whi Was the Home of a Deserter the Pack- age Goes Unclaimed, A wall in the private office of the first assistant postmaster general at Washington is decorated with a silk panel about six feet long by three feet wide, on which is worked in the most intricate and beautiful weave the United States, surmounted by an eagle with outstretched wings and open beak, a picture of majesty and defiance. In the center of the shield is a reproduction, about six inches square, of the famous painting depict- ing Washington crossing the Del- aware. Visitors who saw the picture noticed something peculiar about the eagle and the painting, but were un- able to define just what it was, but were united in saying that the panel Was one of the finest examples of Ame nart, A visitor from the coast happened in the other day, however, and instant- ly remarked that the banner had been worked in Japan, Then it was noticed that Gen, Washington and all his offi- cers and oarsmen had slant eyes and the typical Japanese cast of counte- nance, and that the figure of the eagle surmounting the whole was a Japan- ese design, The panel is being held in custody of the dead letter office. It Was sent from the Philippines to an address in Brooklyn, but was refused, and it was later discovered that the number given was the home of a de- serter from the army, who probably thought the package was a decoy. The banner will be sold at the reg- ular auction of the dead letter office and should bring about $100, MANILA UP TO DATE, The Philippine City Is to Have a Mod- ern Electric Street Car System, Manila is to h Street car service erated by elec tricity, and a modern electric light- ing plant, provision for these —im- provements having been made in an act passed by the United States Philippine commission, All the es- sential features of the act were tele- graphed from Manila to the war de- partment. In order to give Ameri- ean bidders plenty of time to eom- pete for securing a street railway franc po and the eleetr lighting franchise, bids will be received by the municipal board of Manila until March 4, 1903. The route of the railway will be 35 miles long and will cover the im- portant streets in Manila. It is so arranged by the terms of the fran- chise as to furnish a satisf. tory system of passenger transportation from any part of the city to any other part. After 25 years the rates of fare are to be readjusted by arbitration and the city will then have the privi- lege of purchasing the entire plant at a price to be fixed by arbitration based on the net earnings. IMMIGRATION LAWS EVADED. e oan up-to-date Many Ineligible Europeans Enter the United States by Way of Canada, Commissioner General Sargent, of the immigration bureau, the other day made public a report from Rob- ert Watchorn, special immigrant in- spector, dated Paris, France, on the immigration of the United States by way of Canada, Mr. Watchorn says that Europeans who obviously are ineligible to enter the United States for several years have been directed by designing agents to Canadian ports with a view to effecting a surrepti- tious entrance into the United States across the international boundary. Intending immigrants who by reason of some disqualification are rejected by the lines running to United States ports are turned over to lines run- ning to Canada, and with few ex- ceptions they are accepted without question. Thousands every year thus find their way to Canada and thence to the United States. FRENCH BLOOD IN KAISER. Genealogist Who Tries to Show the Emperor Is Descended from Admiral Gaspard, A French genealogist has made the strange discovery that Emperor Wil- liam of Germany has French blood in his veins, starting with the assertion that the emperor is descended from the French Admiral Gaspard II, The show the French pedigree thus: “Gaspard de Coligny, born February 16, 1517, at Chatillon-sur-Loing; we&ded October 16, 1547, at Chatillon, Charlotte de Laval, and from this union came in Hohenzoilerns sprang.” The author shows by a genealogical apether Bourbon-Montpensier and Eleonore 0} What Wu Ting Fang really thinks f us is a private matter, but, says remedy extant for sprains, strains,|°' "*. P \ ters y ond sores all of which ar. the Chicago Inter Ocean, we can judge by what he has said to us— | play or through accident, Ev. | that, while he admires our ways, he : ‘is not quite certain that our taste 3 + the standard liniment and is the best. j i of colored silks and gold the shield of , FOR DISAPPEARING CARRIAGE, Mechanism Opposed by Gen, Miles Is to Be Used Even for the Small Bore Guns, Secretary Root has approved ree- ommendations that the disappearing gun carr with gun ix-inch caliber ¢ as with those of larger bore This action marks the close of a ‘contention lasting many months among the fortification authorities of the war department. The carriage to be used is largely the:design of Gen. Crozier, the present head of the ord- nance bureau. Its adoption was an- tagonized bitterly by Gen. Miles, as head of the board of ordnance and for- tification, Congress at its last session, because of the differences, authorized the ap- pointment of a special board to pass on the merits of the invention, That board recommended the use of the carriage, in the discretion of the sec- retary of war, for guns exceeding six inches in caliber, but suggested that the use of the carriage for guns of six inches or less be suspended. This suggestion recently has been again under eration by the board of ordnance and fortification, and, in the : board has agreed to recommend that the line should be drawn below the six- inch gun rather than above it; that the secretary exercise the same dis- cretion with reference to it that he exercises with reference to the guns of higher caliber, and that the car- riage should be used for guns of smaller bore than six inches, PRIZES TO SERVANT GIRLS. be used in conyection s well eons sence of Gen, Miles, the The P aise of Gold Pleces Keeps Domestics at New York in One Kitchen Two Years, The servant girl problem has been solved in unique fashion by — the German — Housewives’ New York for its 300 members, The presentation of 28 ten-dollar gold in as many little whit atin eards and 28 society of piece boxes, 28) explanatory bouquets of flowers to the number of flushed and happy trish and same German domestics at the -g meeting of the society in Tuxedo hall the other afternoon illustrated one feature of its methods, Each recipient of these premiums had held the .position found for her hy the society two y ix of ace for received their see- them had becn in the same y nd thus After the ceremony re- freshments were served, four years, ond premium, Was organized about . with the p nan imi from the clutches of unprincipled em- ployment agents, FOOTBALL BREEDER OF EVILS. The society eight years jot of savin me ob- rt girls ch lor Andrews Tells Nebraska Students That Excess Enthusi- asm Over Games Is Wrong, Chancellor Andrews told the stue dents of the University of Nebraska the other day he feared football en- husiasm: and” the went hand in hand. apparently, he bration in L tory over M sola, when students captured a street car and partly dis- mantled it. That wus the devil’s work, The chancellor declared it would have evil sometimes Such a condition, aid, followed the cele- coln of Nebraska's vie- been far better had the team been de- feated than to have sueh an exhibi- tion. His remarks are supp 110 be a warhing in anticipation of the three big games in Lincoln, He is a great admirer and supporter of the game. AN ISLAND iN DANGER. in Lake Mich » Shows & Com-= pletely Out of Sight, Anxiety is felt in South Manitou island over indications th may suddenly be swallowed up in Lake Michigan. Capt. Lafberg, in charge of the life saving station at Sleeping Bear point, has notitied his superiors at Washington that in his opinion the island will soon disappear. A boat- house recently built by the life savers on the island cropped out of sight, and recent soundings have a depth of 30 feet where there were but three fe at the island shown formerly of water, Wedding Ring Found in Codfish. Henry Bauerman found a solid gold wedding ring in a fish the other morning. Bauerman, who has a cafe at Barclay street, New York, stopped at a Front street fish store and bought half of a 16-pound cod. The cod had come from Boston the night before and was already cleaned, But when Bauermann was preparing for “free hot lunch” he found the ring imbedded in the ribs, he says. The ring is more than. a quarter of an inch in breadth and bears the inserip- tion, “Lew to Lou, ’89.” Ohio's Centennial, Active preparations are already un- der way in Chillicothe, O., for the celebration of the centennial of the state in May next. The State His- torieal and Archaeological society and a commission appointed by the governor are jointly supervising the arrangements, Eminent — speakers from Pennsylvania, Virginia, Ken- tucky and other commonwealths which contributed to the upbuilding of the Buckeye state are to be in- vited to attend the celebration, Can% Stand Water, It is reported that heavy rains have driven the mad mullah back. We have always suspected from the looks of that fellow’s portrait, says the Chi- eago Record-Herald, that he wouldn't take kindly to water. — 2 Sa att AN RLLLLLLLL LLP LLLP LOPE Pl LYE The Big 4. 43) a wains tlhe 0. . Store CLOAKS, COATS, CAPES. Ladies and Misses Coats, long and short, mostly this woes RRVLQNVLLQLLLLLLLOLLLLL OL LL PLP LLL LLO PLO LL LPL Yr wy year’s styles in all wool Meltons and Beavers at 25 cents on the Dollar of original cost. All must be sold. Good all wool Misses Reefers from 50c to $2, worth from $2.00 to $8.00. Ladies jackets from $1.00 to $5.00, made to sell at from $5.08 to $20.00, This is your chance to get good warm garments at littie cost. All our fine all wool Dress Goods at Half Price Heavy Frieze and Meltons for skirts and suits 274e. Big Underwear Sale Men's merino winter underwear at 19 cents, Men’s heavy Rnit fine random shirts and drawers worth 50 cents at 30 cents, : Men’s fine soft wool undershirts, silk finish, sold yen- erally at 88 cents at 45 cents, Also finest gauze heavy fleece lined at same price, The finest and best heavy Fedora fleecod, silk finish underwear with lung protectors on shirts, sold every- where for 75 cents, ut 49 cents, Our Shoe Sale i Is still on with sales increasing, Such goods at such prices, Wales, Goodyear, Ball and ) Candee overshoes boots and felt boots at dry weather prices, Ki South 4 O. K. ip aio aie aa aa a ao Bo Ge Ge i Ge is Se io eo Sen thn Seb eo ao te a tn th te Ss en he tn hn hn is hn is tin hn hn No wonder, TORE, *... Ed amd ee ee Se Se 2 ae PP Pet <0 a0 440 40 Ga 0 AD GAD AAD ta 4a AS AD AD AD ld aioe ade re . a aime a , , ( oy Phacners,«Boarps or Epecarioy | Joplin Very Much Aroused, AND ALL Orners INterestep ty | EDeeationaL Are AIRS: You ure earnestly requested to at- tend the Bates county teachers meet- ng to be held at Butler, Mo sin West School building on Friday and sat- urday, Nov. 28 and 29, 1902. We will have an interesting and instruc. |. . “ ; ‘ ; just been commeneed in Joplin, eive program, which will bediseussed "oy... ‘ ‘ | ‘This city hud waited one year for by some of the leading educators of | He Ae bs ¢ | an additional appropriation of $50,- “0 o j teed ae | O00 to the $100,000 already appro- We unhesitatingly reeommend that ; “4 ‘ priated so a more substantial build- all teachers who can do so, toattend raya : ean elie x .,, | ing could be erected, and it is now the meeting at Springtield, which wil! hee : ‘ ? earned that a building to cost only bein session at the same time, butas |. : . $104,000 is to be constructed out of alarge number of teachers will beun- ‘ A . , : inferior material, which will be secur- able to do this, we recommend that | A ; pe ine : y . el in Indiana. The Supervising all Boards of dtetion attow their: A rrpergeet toni ‘hat ne tov det architect was roundly seored and a sache ‘irregular wages for lri- | tata em re ‘ “6 ided i + 4 memorial is being prepared to send y, NOV. 25; provided, wey a ot . : eae nays ale yattend to the W ashington authorities to one cf these meetings. | pad A | try and change the plans, The meeting to be called to order planted at 1 p. m. Friday. | Joplin, Mo., Novy, 22.—-A Tass meeting of prominent Joplin citizens was held at the Joplin Commercial Club to try and influence the Wash- ington authorities in the matter of using local material in the construc. tion of a public building which has His Picture of Roosevelt. PROGRAM, New York, Noy. 20,—Prince Heury FRIDAY AFTERNOON | of Pless, previous to departure, said aaa iar | on F Sele bo | to the gen-ral manager, Mr. Boas, é son. Response—Wm. Seigenthaler of the Hamburg-American line: “I Library in Rural Schools—Thomas | was carried away with President Douglas. | Roosevelt’s speech at the Chamber of General discussion, : L never saw a man like Nature Work in School—Prof. J. him. Heis full of electric sparks, H, Etter. | j : Discussed by Prof. Ed. Thornburgh and those around him cannot fail to and Miss Emma Cassity. receive the magnetic influence.” elaine siicnacaies Educate Your Bowels With Cascarets, ublic | _ Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever, Our Public | wo/see: 1£0.0.0, tall, droprisns peta ese Commerce. | SATURDAY MORNING, | Paper, Morality in Schools—Prof. A. H. Reynold, follow- pea tien by discussion. The city council of St. Joseph, is The Advantage of Central High | charged with bribery in award- School—Prots. A. L. Ives and 8, M. | ing contracts for city supplies, Gragg. r SATURDAY AFTERNOON. Stops the Cold and Works off the Needed~ Legislation—Jachin Har- Cold. per. Laxative Bromo-Quinine Tablets Discussed by Miss Fannie Grider | eure a cold in one day. No cure, no and T. J. Wheeler. . pay. Price 25 cents. County Supervision—T. L. Davis PIANOS and ORGANS ON and Chas. VanBenthusen. General discussion. 8-2t H. 0. Maxey, Com. Never try to coax a cold or cough, use the remedy that unfa‘lingly con- quers both. Ballard’s Horehound Syrup is the great specifie for all} throat and lupg troubies. Price, 25 and 50 cents.—H. L. Tucker. Were Ordered Beheaded. Victoria, B. C., November 22.— Chinese advices report the issue of an edicit for the decapitation of leading officials and the imprisonment of a number of others because of the dras- tic measures taken by the British minister to bring about the punish- ment of the Funan officials who re-| _ | ri k fused to provide protection for the Hep pear just drop J. H. Kay- two British missionaries, Bruce and | !0T & Co. a car » and they will have Lewis, who were murdered. After | ‘iT aerrenreseente CAL: on you. the usual Chinese delay a naval de- We take old instruments in ex- A A hange. ht the desired re. | “1278 > ins Reonens: Cie Coeired te We handle the following makes: L. B. Merrifield, Hobert M. Cable, UN ° if you are thinking of buying a Adam Schaaf, Kimball and Estey, Headquarters at Nevada, Mo. ou , Sheet music a specialty, : Laxative Bro: n0-Qui * nel rere J. H. KAYLOR & C0, the remedy that cures cold in ome day'| 1-1m Up-to-date Dealers, mene Beate PEN eile MOTs EP apt abe 3 ea DO ai se —_ -

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