The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, January 22, 1903, Page 2

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sieaetens'¢ + FS t 4 : i treats Cerne te ee Are in ULCERS CANCEROUS many respects like other ulcers or sores, and this resemblance often proves fatal. Valuable time is lost in fruitless efforts to heal the sore with washes and salves, because the germs of Cancer that are multi- plying in the blood and the new Cancer cells which are constantly develop- ing keep up the irritation and discharge, and at last sharp shooting pains announce the approach of the eating sickening cancerous sore begins its destractive work. No ulcer or sore can exist with- out some predisposing internal cause that has poisoned the blood, and the open discharging ulcer, or the fester- ing sore on the lip, cheek or other part of the body will continue to spread and eat deeper into the flesh Cancer germs or morbid matter elimi: S. S. S. cleanses the blood of all and sloughing stage, and a hideous, In February, 1899, I noticed a small lump on my lower lip. The doctor cau- terized it but another came and broke outinto an open sore. I began to take 8. 8. 8. and after I had taken seven bot- tles the place healed entirely and no signs of the disease have been seen since. W.P. Brown, Hollands, 8. C. unless the blood is purified and the nated from the circulation. decaying effete matter. It has antidotal and putifying properties that soon destroy the germs and poisons and restore the blood to its natural condition. And when pure blood is carried to the ulcer or sore the healing process ischarge ceases and the place heals . begins, the di ‘ over and newskin forms. §S.S.S. is a strictly vege table blood purifier containing no mercury or minerals of any description. If ydu have an ulcer or chronic sore of any kind, write us about it, medi- cal advice will cost you nothing. Books on Cancer and other diseases of the blood will be sent free. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga. FATAL, IF NOT TRUST LAW. The President Thinks His Party's Suc- cess Depends on It. Washington, Jan. 14.—“It youcall an extra session, we fear it will be fatal to your nomination for President.”’—Senators to thejPresi- dent. “If there is no trust legislation, with or without an extra session, | fear it will be fatal to the party, no matter who is nominated for Presi- dent.”—President Roosevelt to the Senators, Further progress can be recorded in the campaign of the administra- tion to induce Congress to keep the pledges of the party regarding legis- lation for the better regulation of trusts. The bill which is to be pass- edin the House having been complet- ed by Mr. Littlefield’s sub-committee ofthe judiciary committee, President Roosevelt. had all gthe Republican members at luncheon thisJafternoon to reconcile some divergent views en- tertained in the House and Senate. The sub-committee’s bill was consid- ered, and, with some slight modifica- tions in the publicity,,feature, the President is understood to have ap- proved the draft. Mr. Littlefield’s committee will con- sult with Attorney: General Knox to- morrow as to the wording of the pro- visions covering his recommendation | and if present plans ‘are carried out the bill will be reported to the full committee on Friday. Before asking the sub-committee to luncheon the President had obtained the consent of some of the most in- fluential men in the Senate and House to a plan regarding the enforcement of portions of the proposed law, which is in the nature of a compro- mise. Some of the legislators were at first indisposed to favor any legislation at this session. When the President assured them, he regarded the mat- ter of sufficient importance to callan extra session they told him that if he called an extra session they were afraid it would be fatal to his nom- ination in 1904. The reply of the President was that he was less wor- ried about that than about the future of the party, and he felt that ifno action was taken this year look- ing to the regulation of great com- binations of capital it would be dis- astrous to the party and it would make little difference who was nom- inated. ‘ iv »opears that the point to which the great financiers and promoters of New York and New Jersey objected was the Lurowing of theenforcements of the law into the hands of theinter- state commerce commission and the collection of information on which to base future legislation into the hands ofa new commission for that pur- pose. The suggestion was therefore made that the whole matter should be placed in the new department ofcom- merce, in which should be a bureau of corporations. Tothis bureaushould be made the reports of the various corporatighs and a man placed in ‘whose conservatism and di- wantonly disturbed. This suggestion was originally made in President Hoosevelt’s comments on the Knox opinion issued from the White House A WHIPPER WHIPPED, Louisville Man Resents Offen- sive Language Used in Presence of His Wife. Man Who Attacked Col. Planters’ Soundly Thrashed. Louisville, Ky., Jan, 14.—Peter Arlund, the railroad promoter, was given a severe thrashing and thrown out of thelobby of Selbach’s hotel by Frederick W. Houston, local freight agent of the Louisville, Hen- derson and St. Louis railroad, last night. Arlund’s exit was hastened by a number of well directed kicks, scien- tifically placed where they do the most good, When he picked himself up in the street, his face was covered with blood from a cut under his right eye The eye was closed and black anc blue, His tace and forehead wer badly bruised. «+ The trouble originated in a caf of the hotel. Mr. Hudson with Mre Hudson and W. H. Slaughter, Jr., was eating supper about 7 o'clock, when Arlund, accompanied by G. §. Hinckley, of Mobile, came into tl« room, ¥ The newcomes were invited to ta @ @ seat at the same table by Mr. Huce son. A few minutes later in thecou: @ of the conversation, Arlund refer: @ to a capitalist in another city witl @ repulsive epithet. Hudson resented this remark an requested Hinkley to get Arlund out into the lobby, as he wished to cre ate no disturbance in the cafe wherr a number of ladies were eating. A few minutes later Mr: Hudso: sxcused himself from his wife anc walked into the lobby. : Arlund was leaning against a ciga) stand near the front door. Withou: the excitemnent, Mr. Hudson ap proached him, and. denouncing}him for using indecent language in the presence of Mrs. Hudson, struck Ar- lund a terrific blow in the face. The first blow was followed by & fusillade, Hudson using both fists and playing a tattoo on the counte- nance of the promoter. Arlund made no effort to return the blows, but endeavored as best he could to ward off the attack. Holding both arms in front of his face, he backed wbout the room, cry- ing aloud from pain. As he neared the door he turned to escape. As he went through the doorway Hudsow’raised his footjand Wetmore at Arlund into the street. Arlund is the man who gainedjno- Fight on Smoot. Washington, Jan. 15.—Present in- dications are that Apostle Smoot will meet. some resistance when he comes to the Senate, although the will take has not been disclosed. apostle, it is alleged, vacates any oath taken before the United States officials. . Thousands of letters have been protesting against the seating of Apostle Smoot. These letters are Nargely from women. _ The reasons given are that he is a ‘Mormon. Nearly all the writers con- sider that reason sufficient. ons would seemingly be the first step. Missourians Unite on Clark. Washington, Jan. 15.—The Demo- crats of the Missouri aelegation have united on Champ Clark as the mi- nority leader of the House,tosucceed Richardson. John Short Williams, of Mississippi, is Mr. Clark’s only rival, but the contest is close. Killed Wife and Himselt. Purdy, Mo., Jan, 16.—About o’clock this morning, J. M. Huf, proprietor of the Purdy Hotel, killed his wife and then himself with a pir- tol. 4 His wife was shoy twice, once in the left temyle and once in the throat. Domestic and financial troubles ire supposed to have caused tie tragedy Is the worst kind of poverty. However tich a woman may be, if her health is ‘poor” she is poor indeed. She has no appetite for food and the choicest dishes cannot tempt her, She turns and tosses through a restless night on a couch which might woo an empress to slumber, She has no strength for household cares, ao delight in social pleasure, She sits ‘perked up in a glistering grief wearin 1 golden sorrow.” She is a wife an mother. But she has no happiness in sither relation. She knows her husband’s life is set in tune and time to the minor nusic of her own misery. If her child laughs or cries her nerves quiver with pain, Ask such a woman if she would like to be well; to be her husband's comrade, her child’s playmate. Could there be but one answer? - Such a woman can get well if she will. All her symptoms indicate a diseased condition of the delicate womanly or- ganism, ‘Cure that condition and the woman will be lifted up to the full en- joyment of health, In ninety-eight cases out of every hun- red Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription will cure womanly diseases, will restore the womanly health. It has cured tens of thousands of women many of whom had been given up by physicians and friends. It is eaebiiiaily a medicine for woman’s ills. It dries enfeebling drains. It heals inflammation and ulceration. It cures female weakness and bearing down pains, It tranquilizes the nerves, re- stores the appetite and gives refreshing “Favorite Prescription” differs from almost all other medicines put up for woman’s use in that it contains no alco- hol and is entirely free from opium, co- caine and all other narcotics. It is in the truest sense of tang, | were in charge of the electric car administered two Kicks thas] sout a uterus, | which last August ran into the car- minis\ wo kic sent} Stantl; toriety some weeks ago by assault-| scribe ing Col. Moses C. Wetmore at Sthe Planters’ hotel for an alleged insult to a woman. Arlund, whois a big man, called Col. Wetmore out of the cafe and struck him, Bystanders Interfered. The next day Arlund mailed a challenge to Col. Wetmore\{o fight a duel. Immediately after sending the challenge Arlund boarded the train for Louisville. It developed later that the woman over whom the trouble occurred was not Arlund’s wife and that his rea} wife was at her home in Louisville at the time ofthe attack at the Planters’. form which the opposition to him Saddlery, The Mormon oath, taken by an Buggies ceived by United States senators, Road + An investigation into Utah condi- Wragons. fic explosion occurred at the Hamil- ton Powder company’s works, De- parture Bay, this morning. George Simonetta, James Fulforte and ten Chinamen were killed, Only one body, that of a Chinaman, Was re- covered, blown to fragments. The gun cot- ton storage house exploded first, the concussion exploding the geligmite, the drying house 400 feet away, where the great loss of life is supposed to have occurred. The ground was ex- cavated to a depth of six feet where the buildings stood. The buildings were blown into kindling and scat- tered with fragments of human flesh over several acres. The tramway was torn up and a length of steel rail twined spirally around a tree like a whip lash.” James Preston, a nitro- glycerin maker, had a miraculous escape, and owed his life to his cool- ness. 4,000 feet from the explosion whenit occurred and was thrown down. The window and a part of the wall were blown in, but he kept his machinery running in spite of the concussion, ¢ which almost stopped it, ‘and never | firms representing South African in-| and J. Pierpont Morgan are said to left his post, thus preventing a third | terests, met to-day and definitely explosion. testify to the tremendous force of the explosion. The management state your appetite, energy, strength and i | Bears the Th Kind You Have Always Bought Harness and and Surries, Wragons aad Spring Wi Harnes $10 to $30; Singh Rarease 97 00 985; Second-hand "Hurness $3 to $15; Saddles, all and orien. Bugs, Be Coiean, ‘agon Sheets and Bows. Our Vehicles are the latest in design and ee Jome and see us; get our prices and you will surely trade with MoFARLAND BR MEN BLOWN INTO FRAGMENTS. The History by Miss Ida M. Tarbell which began in the NOVEMBER McCLURE’S is the Great Story of . ~ Standard Oil. Explosion of Gun Cotton in British Columbia Wrought Terrific Havoc. Nanaimo, B C., Jan, 14.—A terri- Miss Tarbell’s work is of unequalled importance as a docu- ment of the day. Her story has live men in it; they suffer and work and win and loose their battles with the verisimilitade that removes the tale from the dry statement and clothesit with Others were absolutely the color of human interestand the vivid rainbow garment of human sympathy. The results of her work are likely to be far- reaching; she is writing unfinished history. Boston Globe. An absorbing and interesting contribution to the trust question. Chicago Inter-Ocean, The most Important announcement made by any magazine, , N.Y. Journal, For other great features of 1903 send for our prospectus. MeCLURE'S. 10 cents a copy, $1.00 a year. Send us the dollar, at 145 East 25th Street, New York, or subecribe through your dealer.” He was running his machinery _Rockfeller Against Morgan. Paris, Jan. 15 —John D. Rockteller To Pay the Heavy War Debt. London, Jan. 15.—Members of be fighting each ‘other for the privi- agreed on a war contribution of 150 | lege of lighting Paris with gas. The worke are three miles from | million dollars, payable in three an-| They are the backers of the two Nanaimo and broken windows here | nual installments of 50 million dol-| rival companies that are struggling lars and covered by a loan not re- | for the rich contract. Pi deemable before ten years. The first| Rockfeller, according to inside in- fifty million dollars will be issued in | formation, wants the contract for 1904. Barou Rothschild was ap-| speculative purposes, but Morgan pointed to choose the date of the is-| wants to carry it out as an invest- sue. An announcement of the agree- | ment. ‘ | ment arrived at was cabled to the ees ee colonial secretary at Johannesburg. Revolution Imminent. ; | His acceptance is anticipated. that it is utterly impossible to as- sign apy cause. No witnesses sur- vived. . If Unwell, . Try a 50c bottle of Herbine, notice ' ‘ ‘ the improvement speedily effected in A sure sign of approaching revols ,and serious waa in your system it $100 Reward $100. nervousness, sleeplessness, or stom- F d debility! The readers ot this paper will be pleas- poe Pg AI the pete ved tion and debility! ‘ ed to learn that there is at least one q y ; Isaac Story, Ava, Mo., writes, | Greaded disease that science ‘has been | Causes. It never fails to tone the Sept. 10th, 1900. “I was in bad | able to cure in all its stages, and that is stomach, regulate the kidneys and health, I had stomach trouble for 12 | Catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is the | bowels, stimulate the liver, and clar- months, also dumb chills. Dr. J. W. | only positive cure known to the medical | ify the blood. Run down syetems Mory prescribed Herbine, it cured me | fraternity. Catarrh being a constitution: | benefit particularly and all the usual in two weeks. I cannot recommend | #! disease, requires, @ constitutional | attending aches vanish under ite it too highly, it will do all you claim ’ testment. Hall's Ca~arrh Cure is taken | searching and thorough effecti for it.” Sold by H. L. Tucker, drug-, iternally, scting directly upon the | Electric Bitters is only 50c, and tha gist. tem, thereby destroying the foundation it is returned if it don’t give perfect: ot the disease, and giying’ the patient | Satisfaction. Guaranteed by~H. L. strength by building up the constitution | Tucker, druggist. and assisting nature in doing its work, : The proprietors hayé so much faith in its curative po that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it tails to cure. Send tor list of testimon- fals. Address F. J. Cuenzy & Co., Tuiedo,O. g@prSold bydruggis § 75c. vigor. Watch how it_ brightens the spirits, gives freedom from indiges- For Killing William Craig. Pittsfield, Mass., Jan. 15.—The grat jury in the case of Euclid Mad- den and James T. Kelly to-day re- ported an indictment against each, charging manslaughter. These men A Spark in a Keg of Powder. Joplin, Mo., Jan. 15.—David Brown was killed and George Young was dangerously injured in a powder ex- plosion at Reed’s station, east. of here, last night. The two men were sitting ina blacksmith shop when a red-hot spark flew into a keg of pow- : The Coal Bill is Signed. ‘ Washington, Jan. 15.—Soon after 1 o’clock this afternoon Representa- tive Wachter, of Maryland, chair- man of the House committee on en- rolled bills, accompanied by Repre- sentative Allen, of Maine, reached the | executive offices with the engrossed | _ and enrolled copy of the free coal bill passed by Congress yesterday: Presi St, dent Roosevelt received the commit- tee at once and signed the measure, immediately, expressing pleasure ~Bheage? acted so prompt- erton howd at once f He, New York, Jan. 15.—The two an 3, GLOBE-DEMOCRAT. Itstandspre- one-fourth pound baby born to Mi#y eminent and alone ° Vincent McNally is dend despite thyfmewspapers, and riage of President Roosevelt with the result that the secret service agent, William Craig, was killed, SCASBTVORIA. Swooned at Sentence. _ St. Louis, Jan. 12.—Judge Adams in the United States district aourt, to-day sentenced John Fickler, con- Elgin, Il., Jan 16.—George Gron- berg, employed at Marshall Field’s Riverhead, Jan. 16.—In the Louis | retail store in Chicago, a resident of Disbrow murder trial to-day counsel | Ejgip, has brought a $5,000 breach for the defendant, in his address to/| of promise suit against Mrs. Della the jury, advanced the theory that | Wahl Swan, wife of theodore Sw: Clarence Foster and “Dimple” Law- | jr,, whose father is said to ‘be the rence had committed suicide, wealthiest merchantin Elgin, : on January 6. quato J cit y the pl 8 rags the hospital to which the child was | tends to ever, state and t taken to be placed in an incubator, that it would live, _ An Aged Minister Dead, -” Mexico, Mo., Jan. 15.—The Rev. RN.

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