The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, January 8, 1903, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

A SPE il = reine traty lenizen af ike Woode Comes boy Lis sis Result Great Rice tween th: Cincinnat. ot Hix Roldbess and O.b-:r s f the Navy. Aa Made its a —$—$—$—$—_$__—_—— e * the \ the 1 Speed Contest trom Hampton Roads ak ecsiata ce to Porto RB Is Pull of Exeiting ~ habhical Leereenel Surprises—Battleship Alabama noble animal made a great effort to} ee ln Second. | eseupe with its life, but did not suc- Cart great white bone in her It was about three o'clock when with phosphorescent spray | the deer was discovered on the shore hear Sixteenth avenue, east. A” boy named Jewell shot at it several times and it took to the water, swimming j along the shore in an easterly diree in the gre wf owar-] tien, ships ever run on the north Atlantic tg high up on her sharp bows the cruiser Cincinnati forged abreast of Culebra light at San Juan, PLR. ht, a winner at midnight the other nig test ocean race Jewell wounded the animal and ran nto the water to cateh it by the ant- }lers, which he succeeded in doing Just then an Iron Range train went it battleship Alabama. She! yy, had distanced all her rivals of the wwyweight class and had shown her ft seaboard, Barely tw viles astern of the eruiser flashed the white searchlight } making considerable noise. The deer started to swim out inte the luke and Jewell was compelled to re- ease Lis hold, the way from] Fhen t H pron Roads, Va. with the tleet-! ¢, quality by putting up a hammer-ane t boy named MeKenzie took a shots at the animal and by ning and running it got over te f the st ned up for the | Pwenty-third avenue. east, where a Sa PAL janan named Peter Olson saece inj Ke rete * > MT tinishing the bewildered and. fright 1 the Machias ture eet. The last named is] phe dkilting of the deer under the et long, and of} ofpeyinsts teas + oa tie cut. The ofher! many, ‘I say that a trie sports 4 fMan would have pr ithe ant. \tat gun the levis! may while helpless in the water a, —_under_full head « in ten minutes FORBIDS TOBACCO. all were | g thr h the ecean, headed for Culebra, with! Mra, Rossel! Sage Quilts Mayflower Descendants Beoa of the thelr ‘ ! Smoking, he M tussell e will iw s p r Descendants be« men’s’ continued practice of smoking { ; Jin th sence of the women at the : | dinner despite her \ ut t against it, he ’ | dl scourlosy, vy | wit! t tons in t yi chivalry for r ws Ase | M resolve to © the soe ' ' 1 ! | \ taken after 1 err nt effor \ ‘rat Del ! al | ra hendlight: faded f ‘gl ac re Cimerrevvemars Yovene: @ Deas ! ‘ ras the vr titan 7 the 1 oadir Was not ! n } at ' j 1 th vt t at the} oke ¢ th . the Cir privile Was atonce take ‘ wage amatt 9 Lorace horse | OF all over the room, with the result held in check for the finish. that three women were overcome Dy She had made up her handicap of miles, had passed all the others, and was now speeding in the wak The Tues and compelled to go home, TEMPERATURE TESTS MADE, of her sole competitor. It se rattle ned a hopeless task for the | imteresting Experiments with Hale p to try to hold the erniser,| loons (re Conducted by University brave fight of it alt and oon ‘Tnesday and wtoshe made a Authorities at Berne, day Monday, Wednesday She cheered her rival Phe results of'recent experiments to the latter «! 1 Beart ie test the temperature at very high al and then ahe fheralmest within | Utudes have just been published by sight of the eoal the university authorities at Berne. A When Culebra light was picked upp Paper balloon burst ats the Alvhan wi height. an india rubbe draught and ei 15.000 feet, at which height the ins bue «nie ment te gauge the altitude stopped Ra t ie working. The temperature at the Hane at datintet start was one degree centigrade, it Kearsit Mar rase toa degrees in’ the tirst 980 and Machias were hot in sight at the | weters. from 980 to 3.260 it erac finish fell to:minus six. att ‘ gion of uniform temperature was HAPPY MEN IN PRISON, traversed for 500 meters. Afterward the eald was ir ‘ 1.500 meter Preed Conviet in todians Returns te r tere uyin 60 Penitentiary as Uis Chosen } ‘ ! cury he nie liome, ter wus fr en. BURIED IN SAME GRAVE, Catholic Priest aad Protestant Paws +} ‘ d tor of Stutigart, rmany, Friends to the Last. May institution 1 ris Jolin t A Catholi er P A atholie priest and a rotesta ti (le deoaidve a ie pric and a estant pastor, ¢ had beer i le, A ; , k er . friends ves and whose ee Y each other was i er Germa . died on th y high y ember aad 1 r Germany, ¢ n the ‘ : iest died in the morning he buried it in a igi : Si: of the eevening. When the news ‘ot Michinan 4 the pric h was taken to the money he alked | Pastor he expr sed as his last wish into Michigan City and asked the at he might be burie lin the same warden to take-him back, savin otheatle *: As his relatives had no objee- tion this was done. A Catholic priest Ineted the service over his dead eo- iist and a Protestant minister over the dead pastor, was happier inside given his old cell. The warden, to verify the The man was stery, gave Rode half a day off to recover his money. Within a few hours the "one | prisoner returned, carrying a tin ean QUIT MEAT TO GET HEALTH, ! oat, In it was $115, whieh : ed from his pension, alleged that Roc r the purpose the penitentiary. He i old man and is one of the “trusties” of the institution, Society Leaders of Germany and Aus- tria Go to Swiss Lake and Found a Colony. tole oa inte A party of men and women belong- ing to German and Austrian fashion- able society and calling themselves members of a humble vegetarian so- ciety have taken up their abode lately m the shores of the Lake of Laguno. They wear neither hats nor overcoats, and it is against their rules to enter | any house except their temporary resi- nees, Their diet is the simplest. All | says a New York Tribune dispatch ins. Their object is to re- | BRITISH ROYAL TRAINS. All Railroads Have Speeiant Coaches and Charge First-Cin Every Royal Pas Pare for ger. Windsor is deserted Dy royalty, e vegeta )}and 1 Harry Stratton, the son, who, matter to the attention We never tire of telling the story of Uneeda Biscuit. We do not believe that lovers of good, whole- some food ever tire reading it. Uneeda Biscuit are the result of two ideas. That soda crackers could be made better than they had ever been made before. That it was pos- sible to convey them to the home fresh, crisp and clean. ‘ The importance of the soda cracker as an article of daily consumption, made this worthy of extraordinary effort. True, many people laughed at the idea of so much thought—time— labor—capital, being devoted to a soda cracker. But the greatest industries of the greatest country in the world have been developed from smaller things than a soda cracker, and so it seemed worth while to make the best soda cracker that could be made and to place it on the table as good as it had been made. To do the first required the selec- tion of the best materials, of the best equipment, the highest skill. To do the second upset all traditions. The oldest bakers said there was no way to keep a soda cracker good. The Stratton Will in Court. | Negro Postmistress or None. { | Colorado Springs, Col. Dec, 29.—| Washington, Jan. 2.—The feature } Will of the late W.S. Stratton, in-| of the cabinet meeting to-day wasthe | volving a fortune of between 10 mill-| decision to close permanently the | ion dollars and 12 million dollars, | postoffice at Indianola, Miss., from | came up for probate to-day before! which the postmaster, Minnie M. ly | Judie Orr, of the county court of EL, Cox, a negro woman, resigned under | Pasovounty. The case was calledat | compulsion a few days ago, since 10 o'clock, when attorneys represent. | which time the office has been closed. ing the executors who offered the will, The bondsmen have bronght the f the au- is fighting the will, appeared and | thorities bere, with the view to being asked for a continuance until 2 relieved of the responsibility of the oelock in order that the two sides | accumnlated mail. The Postmaster might agree ou a course of procedure | General has had a thorough inves- } in the Hearings that are to follow. , tigation made, and has become sat- The case was continued, | isfied that the woman was obliged to | that her ut pe Atthe ufternoon session, theexecn- | regin under duress—in fac tors’ attorneys will produce the will lifewas endangered. Havir aud with evidence attesting the valid- | ed this state of affairs to theea jity of the signatures of thetestators, | after a long discussion, the decision The attorneys for the son will begin | above noted was reached and the of- | their fight upon the grounds that five will not be reopened until the! the multi millionaire was of unsound | people in the district are ready to | mind at the time he drew the will in| accept this woman as postmistress. | August, 1901. There are thirty law- | (rae yers in the case. | Revolution Imminent. | and serious trouble inyour system it nervousness, sleeplessness, or stom- ach unset. Electric Bitters will 5 i 2.—' . . St. Louis, Jan, 2.—Thomas Dunn, quickly dismember the troublesome a negro, was hanged to-day for the | vauses. It never fails to tone the murder of Peter Jackson, another | stomach, regulate the kidneys and negro, with whom he had quarreled | bowels, stimulate the liver, and clar- about $4. The prisoner spent his|ify the blood. Run down systems last hours in prayer and said he was | rea | gp aig en ge ag ready to die. Before leaving the juil | searching and thorough effectiveness, for the gallows, many of the prison- | Electric Bitters is only 50c, and that ers bade Dunn good by. The execu-| it is returned if it don’t give perfect tion was witnessed by nearly 400 satisfaction. Guaranteed by H. L, - Tucker, druggist. persons, among them being several oon women and children who had crowd- ed their way into the jail yard. St. Louis Woman at a Hanging. Sent Her Picture to Bailey. Topeka, Jan. 2.—Governor-elect . wy Bailey told R. B. Spitler, of Atchison, $100 Reward $100. | ona train recently that his latest let- ‘The readers of this paper will be pleas- ter proposing marriage was froma rom London, The royal trains are | Cove? bealth and strength of nerves, | tly t As 48 : The members are suffering from the strain of social entertainments. in use du reign, Each leading rai oustructed eial trair Womer and Cigarettes, In New igureiics wiihout any k womer now smoke the exeiusive us pay hak tea tei the other for the queer These trains |) are paid for by | i *, | VIN violate, treasurer on the Ocean, will | do not reo ubout that they need nly* thing they ienvo inter ta ty , + hot care about onything. shilling roeneh mile tre A Lewal fut No Moral i caut eled, A New York judve hus ¢ d that . women nuiy stoke f y Want to, Not True to tts & atir : cna A Deities Minteniont the Chi-| The decision is all rleht, says the Chik rae b ick with | Cte Reeord-lerald, but why should they want to? boars as it is painted. = {Catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is the | Saysif it does her justice she is a very vor of -vige a} disenses requires, —a—constitutional | Mit Spitter that tie his received fully | vod taste, and ifthey | able to cure in all its stages, and that ig She sent her picture, and Mr. Spitler only positive cure known to the medica! wtty gin) tndont % “er ae fraternity. Catarrh being a constitution. | Pretty girl inded. Mr. Bailey told | teatrment. Hall's Ca gt Care is taken 500 of these letters. He thought at i ally lin directly upo Y . Fy tieeee nt Seer tre eee ce first they were from practical jokers, ; ; but lately he believes that some of tthe disease, and giving th eet them are y iuine, Of course, it’s all strength by building up the constitution Fy ar ES Pi od assisting nature in doing its work, | & joke about Bailey's promise to wed ne proprietors haye so much tath in, if elected its curative powers, that they offer One Tn Hundred Dollars tor any case that i CASTORIA. tails tu cure. Send tor list of testimon. | Boars tha The Kind You Have Always Bought ‘als. Address KF, j. Cueney & Co. Signature Tuiedo, O. B@FSoll by druggis. 7cc! | oe | le blood and mucous surtaces or the » sereby destroying the fou t Worth Telling NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY That no.one expected it any way. That people were satisfied to eat them stale, as they had been in the habit 1 of doing. And so it fell to the lot ; 4 of younger minds to do this unheard of thing—to keep a soda cracker good ' until eaten. be The result was the creation of the In-er-seal Package with red and white seal. An invention that kept out the air, moisture, dust germs, that first ! retained the natural flavor of the bis- cuit, keeping it crisp and fresh until it { reached the table, and so Uneeda Biscuit becameareality. The little thing that seemed hardly worth while became a great thing that seemed hardly possible. ; To-day over 300,000,000 ‘packages have been consumed by the thought- ful people of this country and the de- mand is ever increasing. That is the story of Uneeda Biscuit. Some day we will tell it over again for the benefit of those who are still “satisfied” with the stale and broken crackers that come ¢ ina paper bag, when they can get Yneeda Biscuit, whole, fresh, and clean. i | 5 | § | THE WALTON TRUST CoO. d \ PRR RRRR AR LR RELA RAPP PLEA A RR PLR RPRRLPPLPPRA PAS eee « OF BUTLER MISSOURI. Capital, Surplus and Profits - : $68,300 00, | Always has ready money on hand to beloaned on farms 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 befor» borrowing of others. We baye 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 !1me Deposits. -———DIRECTORS. Wm. E. Walton, Joha Deerwester, Frank M., Voris, C. H. Dutcher, FRANK ALLEN, Sxcv. J, Everingham, Wu. W. Trigg, Booker Powell, Sam Levy, J.R, Jenkins, T. C. Boulware, C. R. Radford, éd T. J. Wright. Wm. E, WALTON, Pris, | | RREERRAD Vere S - | A-sure sign of approaching revols ( : | | ed to learn that there is at least one yofng woman who lives in Illinois, | biscuit | dreaded disease that science has been DUVALL & PERCIVAL, offer inducements in the matter of long time, easy payments, liberal terms and fair treatment. una ON FARM LOANS BUTLER, MO. { i E alk 4 peepee Dine ARR AnAnn ne Anne mnRReRNempee : Bates County Investment Co, | | i i ; BUTLER,MO. Oapital, « = $80,000. Money to loan on real estate, at low rates, Abstracts of title to all lands aud town lots in Bates county. Choice securities always on hand and for sale. Abstracts of title furnished, titles examined and all kinds of real estate papers drawn ¥.J3. Treanp, Hon. J. B. Newarnw President, Vice-Presilent, vi tele & . Jno. C. Haves, Abstractor, 8. F. Wannoox, Notary. } °

Other pages from this issue: