The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, January 29, 1903, Page 7

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Abobe All dampness and dust. what you don’t want, buy in the In-er-seal Package ‘with red and white seal. NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY When you buy soda crackers you ‘want crispness and flavor—not When you buy ordinary crackers ‘in a bag you get all you don’t want—not all you do want. To get what you do want and not Uneeda Biscuit ,; yer Ss quickly destroys malarial germs. Gives prompt relief in all forms of Malaria and malaria. Sure preventive for those Ague Cure living in malarial districts, 44288" wrnerendersnnnne wy THE WALTON TRUST Co. 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. f ‘ 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—— ~—Wm. BE, Walton, J, Everingham, J.R. Jenkins, John Deerwester, Wn. W. Trigg, TT. C. Boulware, Frank M. Voris, Booker Powell, C. R. Radford, O. H. Dutcher, Sam Levy, T. J. Wright, FRANK ALLEN, 8kcy, Wa. E, WALTON, Pres, P Bates County Investment Co, viii “ _ Money to loan on real estate, at low rates, Abstracts of title to all lands and town lots in Bates county. Choiee , securities always on hand and for sale. “Abstracts of title furnished, titles examined and all kinds of real estate papers drawn, ¥.J. Tre@anp, Hon. J. B, Newsunrry, J.C. Onanx, President, ‘Vice-President. Seo’y. & Treas, Ino. C. Hayes, Abstractor, 8. F. Wannock, Notary. (Tat Echt RR A NA Twice Every week. he St. Louis omer tthe wou, Globe Democrat ONE DOLLAR A YEAR. wel The Great Republican Paper of America. from all the world a Py cons Ree Mtg Full corre bea a 't variety of interes: and instructive matter 01 apt nga the family. Un THE DAILY GLOBE-DEMOCRAT and of every reader of AN daily paper. ICE BY MAIL POSTACE PREPAID Dail Fa Dail; Sunday Including Bunda A Without Sunday Edition Ono year 6 68)One year 00} 48 to 60 Pages. § months 8.60/6 months 2.00/One year $2.00 enths 1.50/3 months 1.00;6 monthé THE GREAT WORLD'S FAIR spaper will be indespensible during the coming year. kLSUBSCRIBE TO-DAY. The Globe Printing Co. Stj/Louis, Mo. na equal or rival anne western newspapers, and ought to be in the andp His Bride Believed in Him. Wellington, Kan., Jan, 22 —R. Higgins, sheriff at Roswell, N. M., and Tobe Odell, ex-sheriff, passed through here last night with Nathan Hendricks, wanted in Roswell fur the killing two years ago of William Rainbolt, a deputy sheriff under Odell Hendricks was captured at Tarrington, N. D., January 6, on in formation secured by the Roswell authorities, He was married Thanksgiving Day and had been known as Newton Clayton at Tar- rington. When he was arrested and his young wife learned of his decep- tion she suid: ‘ “Come back if you--get clear of the murder charge and I will marry you under your right name and live with you.” Simple Colds, Cease to be simple, if at all pro. longed. The safest way is to put. them aside at the very beginning. Ballard’s Horehound Soren stops a cold and removes the cause of colds. 25c, 50c and $1 bottle at H. L. Tucker’s drug store. Missouri Negro Lynched, Poplar Bluff, Mo., January 22.— Andy Clark, colored, was lynched at Leeper, a small station north ofhere, last night. Last Monday Clark and James Herman, a whitefarmer about 60 years old, became involved ina dispute about some land. They quarreled for some time. Clark final- ly left the old man and went to his home, about a quarter of a mile away, procured a shotgun, returned to Herman’s home, and, calling him to the door, shot his head almost off by emptying both barrels of the gun at his victim. Clark escaped and eluded his pureuers until late yester- day afternoon, when he was captured in the swamps east of Leeper and was placed in the village calaboose. About 8 o’clock last night a mob of about seventy men battered in the prison door, took the trembling negro to a near-by tree and hanged him. If Unwell, Try a 50c bottle of Herbine, notice the improvement speedily effected.in your appetite, energy, strength and vigor. Watch how it brightens the spirits, gives freedom from indiges- tion and debility! Isaac Story, Ava, Mo., writes, Sept. 10th, 1900. “I was in bad » | health, Ihad stomach trouble for 12 Almost equal to a daily at the price of a weekly. The latest telegraphic | months, also dumb chills. Dr. J. W. Mory prescribed Herbine, it cured me in two weeks. I cannot recommend ualed as 8 newspaper and home| it too highly, it will do all you claim purnal. Two papers every week. One Dollar a Year, Sample copies free. ag Sold by H. L. Tucker, drug- Struck By Engine. St. Joseph, Mo., Jan. 15.—John G. Bulling, 70 years of age, and an old rominent resident of St. Joseph, was struck and instantly killed by the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific engine number 467 at the crossing ™ ickory and Seventh streets to- | jay. Revolution Imminent. A sure sign of approaching revols 1.00 and serious trouble in your system it nervousness, sleeplessness, or stom- ach unset. Electrie Bitters will quickly dismember the troublesome causes. It never fails to tone the stomach, regulate the kidneys and ill be held at St. Louis in 1904, and the greatest St, Louis | hovels stimulate the liver, and clar- down systems benefit particularly and all the usual attending aches vanish under ite and thorough effectiveness. Electric Bitters is only 50c, and that it is returned if it don’t e perfect satisfaction. Guaranteed by H. L. Tucker, druggist, SAILS A RAGING SEA, Novel Life-Saving Globe Is Subject- ed to Most Severe Test. Suecessfally Rides the Waves Of Dover While They Are Ranning Too High for Ordinary Lifeboat. Another test has been given the life-saving globe invented for use in shipwrecks by Capt. Donvig, a Nor- wegian, says a New York Herald dis- patch from London. The object of this test was to ascertain how the craft would behave in heavy seas. While the waves were running ex- tremely high and a sea was running in Which it was declared no lifeboat could live, the globe was towed by a tug from Dover harbor into the chan- neh. In order that the apparatus should be as near as possible in the same condition as it would be if used in case of shipwreck, it was weighted with sandbags, which, with four men who were in the globe, made the weight equivalent to that of 20 men and 30 days’ provisions. The globe, without iss crew, was first towed out to sea, between Dover and the South Foreland. The strong wind raised terrific seas. Several times the tug was caught in the trough and her decks were com- pletely swept, so that it was neces- sary to batten down all the hateh- ways, But the globe rode over the waves like a cork, Finaidly it was towed into quiet water where Capt. Donvig, accompanied by three Dover seamen, went aboard. They fastened the manhole and the ghobe was again lowed to sea, When the full foree of the wind and seas was experienced capt. Donvig signaled through the manhole to cast off the tow rope. : The globe, left to itself, bobbed about in the heavy’seas, but showed no inclination to roll over, After tossing about for ten or fif- teen minutes Capt. Donvig and one of the sailors emerged from the man- hole and, lashing themselves to the outside of the globe, set & Sal! sail, which they pulled through the man- hole with them, The air funnel was used as a mast and the queer craft was navigated back to harbor, a dis- tance of several miles, SCHOOL ON A SHIP. Naatical Preparatory School io Fit Boys for Military Academy of Annapolis, According to a man identified with the plan, the projectors of. a nauti- cal preparatory school met at the As- tor house, and it was decided to be- gin work on a ship that will take several hundred boys around the world on cruises while they are be- ing prepared for college or for the United States military academy or for Annapolis. The name of the boat will be Young America. William E. Winant, who is in the bureau of naval construction at Washington, will supervise the construction. It is to be a sailing vessel of 2,600 tons, capable of car- rying about 600 cadets or students, instructors and attendants. Mr. Winant said that the plan of the nautical school, which is to be “a school on a ship, but not a school- ship,” was originated by Lieutenant Commander (. H. Harlow, U. S. N,, now executive officer of the Raleigh, and that his plans were highly com- mended and amplified by President Roosevelt and Gen. Leonard Wood several years ago. The course of study will last four years, and in each of the years a long cruise will be made. RELIGION BASIS FOR DIVORCE. An Important Decision on the Matter Made by the Courts in Austria, An important decision was rendered the other day by the provincial civil court at Vienna which shows the ur- gent necessity to American and En- glish women who may be contemplat- ing marriage with an Austrian sub- ject of first obtaining competent legal advice in the matter. In the present instance an Austrian named Clemens Kolischer was married in London in 1898 to an English woman, a singer, by a civil ceremony. Kolischer de- scribed himself as having no religious faith, and the bride gave herself as belonging to the Protestant church. Kolischer recently applied to the Vi- enna courts for a legal separation, and the tribunal in its decision held that the marriage was invalid on account of the differences of religion between the contracting parties, in spite of the contention submitted by the woman’s counsel that such marriages are per- fectly legal in England, France and Germany. First to Waltz. The controversy between European papers as to the origin of the waltz was settled by the discovery that the waltz was first danced at the French court on November 9, 1178, when it was announced as the composition of a French courtier, who called it “volta.” Solving a Picture Puzzle. With the aid of copious notes, says the Chicago Tribune, it is compara- tively easy to understand an instan- taneous picture of a football scrim- mage. Fainting Girls. ‘Sixteen girls fainted in a Utica knit- ting mill the other day when one of them pricked her finger, says the Chi- cago Record-Herald. ‘ The “eternal feminine” haen’t been eliminated yet. j ! APPOTIONMENT. | HOWARD TOWNSHIP, Dist. No. I $156 | aa | een ae 117 6 Railroad, Telesraph and Telephone’ a wo School Monies for the Year igoz. Dist. te Dist, \ Dist. Dist, Dist, Dist. Dist, Dist, Dist. Dist. N Dist. + No. OSAGE AND HOWARD TOWNSHIPS, Dist, STATE OF MISSOURI, } County oF Karas. 5 : mn I, J. F. Herrell, clerk of the county court of MINGO TOWNSHIP. | Bates County, hereby certify the above to be a No, 1 correct copy of the apportionment of the ratl= = 2 %6 road, telegraph and telephone school moneys se as 27 44 for the year 1902, “ Se REE GN 2016 fexat) Witnere may mend spt onler said : a art, of J , ses, SPRUCE TOWNSHIP. Souris OY. HERMELL: Clerk, Ne, 1 $50 & ee * .% 33 04 2 ‘ en 2 83 04 You Cannot Win. “-% sozo| It is pointed out by an Eastern ai , 21 St ediior, who probably tried it while 7 aes aa TOWNSHIP. sowing his wild oats, that a young aie - man ought to know that hecannot be a * 16 4 | Up late nights abusing bis stomach i. : S16) and be in good shape for business the 5a ‘ ae rc nextday. There is too much com- petition in this world, and especially in the pushing west, for a man to abuse his head and succeed. A young man may be popular for the time being, but when his money is gone and he has lost his job, his old friencs soon drop him, When aman boozes his mental faculties are notin shape to compete with men who do not injure themselves. An employer of labor said recently that the young man who gets the sleep his system needs, is temperate in bis habits, lives within his means and shows up for work in the morn- ing with clear eye and active brain— that is the man business men are looking for, They want employes theycan trust. Having worked hard and luid by a competence they want to throw some of the burdens off, and they won't throw them off on the employe who is too much ofa “good fellow.” Cutit out, boys, There's nothing HUDSON TOWNSHIP, sis 48 42:00 a7 44 2 2856 1b oe 2016 22 40 ROCKVILLE TOWNSHIP, No 1 : PRAIRIE TOWNSHIP, No, 1 ‘9130 4s 30 80 42 00 3 15 tis “ 4 PLEASANT GAP TOWNSHIP, 15 Os al ost a) i} SUMMIT TOWNSHIP, 1 ean Z % ay . hy 60 SHAWNEE TOWNSHIP, No 1 in it. There's a whole lot of hon- hed. sense in that good fellow business, “ ‘ You can’t fool the public very long Mmm by living beyond your means and GRAND RIVER TOWNSHIP, keeping up appearances. There must me : be a showdown some time or other, » 4 and that means a loss of self respect ene and many bitter experiences. All men will think more of you if pou hold yourself in and don’t try to live a wine existence on a beer income. Many a bright and promising busi- ness man has failed, because he tried DEER CREEK TOWNSHIP, No, 1 aiaiiaks. to travel in too swift a class, Whereas had he lived within his No, 1 means he might have become a high- rf ; ly successful merchant. wo 4 The world doesn’t give its treas- eres ures easily. It isn’t in the cards for j ; 19 69} @ll of us to be millionaires, and MT, PLEASANT. TOWNSHIP, mighty few of the “good fellows” get No, 1 03 12] into that class. It is better to earn eee #16) your way first and go hunting for ee ae »» 49 | @00d things when you have reached ee | 10 08} the point where you can spare both Moe °6 88) the time and the money. Then, pos- ‘coe, ee ress 7" ss | 8ibly, you have more sense and have LONE OAK TOWNSHIP, adifferent notion about what agood Ro YF eae ; vo» $29 68) time is. —Davenport Republican. si 2 31 36 i. 5 ‘ ee About Missouri Senators, Senator ‘Thos. H. Benton served Missouri in the United States Senate just 30 years from 1821 to 1851. If Mr. Cockrell lives until March 4, 1905, he will have equaled Benton’s long term of service. Mr. Vest took his seat in 1879, and will, therefore, on his retirement, huve served twen- ty-four years, or one term less than 1 2 “ 4 N 64 40 No, “ Leen $23 f2 2 ee cevaease osnee 19 60 3 68 32 Is 44 Dist, No. 1. Benton served and ope term less than e : r Mr. Cockerell has been elected for, »| Phe next longest term of service was that of David K. Atchison, who was senator from 1845 to 1855, and the next that of David Barton, Missou- ri's-tirst-senater, who was mr ottice 5) continuously ten years, : ‘The shorvest Wri ever served by @ Missouri senator was that of Gen- eral James Shields. He was elected in 1879, at the sume time that Sena- “ 4 ELKHART TOWNSHIP. No 1. tor Vest was. Senator Vest, how- “i ; ever, was elected for a tull term, while ie General Shields was chosen only to a : fill out the unexpired term of Sena- BAST BOONE TOWNSHIP, tor Lewis \. bugy, deceased. He na t . esi s6| Served six weeks, Leyimning January a 64/21, and ending March 4, 1879, eae : . pe ‘Lhis election gave General Shields = 8 - 15 63/ UNIQue distiucuyn of having been WEST BOONE TOWNSHIP,. sent to the United States Seuate by Dist. No, i; 8 three different states. He was elect- o * 5 aa ed to this office in illinvis im 1549, ee eae .. 1129] and served & tuil term. He was ulso WEST POINT TOWNSHIP, one of the first senators elected trom Dist. No, 1 $2 40) Minnesota in 1858, on its organiza- 2 2 20 . oe es 26 g2| WOR as w state. He subsequently ier Te 1176} lived in California, aud came co Mis- “ . ne SOUT alter the Close Of tlie civil war. HOMER TOWNSHIP, —Ex. Miss Gould Will Be There, Topeka, Kan., January 23.—Miss | Helen Gould has accepted an invita- vion toattend the Internativnal Kail- a7 4| road Y, M. U. A. conference to be held ae in this city April 23, 3080| President Roosevelt has also been tog! invited. LNU $89 04 @s4eoewwr F omen ~

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