The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, February 19, 1903, Page 11

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British Lectarer Denounces the Oys- ter as Responsible ior Mom pf the Diseases of Men. ScROFULAG I bequeath to my children Scrofula with all its i | faculties of ci ed man, to . tittendant horrors, humiliation and suffering. This isa Dr, Sir James, Crichton H. Brown, in strange | to leave to 3a Sey burden to a lecture delivered in London the other Place ie shoulders ‘ day dilated upon the decay inthe diges- Teachers dase Gwe the by and : DIGESIIVE FACULTIES DECAY: \pank ROBBERS TRAILED TO CAVE. URIB-URIBE A SUICIDE. 'BA@H INVESTOR IS LIABLE | FOR WHOLE AMOUNT. Rudolph and Lewis Believed to Be Hid- Defeat Broke the Heart of ee ing in Meramec River Cavern. i Sapeleon. Salem, Feb. 13 —Possibly the Un-' Kingston, Jamaica, Feb. 8—The ion Bank robbers, Bill Rudolph and British steamer Para, which arrived | Old Subscribers to £. J. Arnold & Co.'s Books Are Partners and Can which he said anumber of diseases could betraced. Notonly have modernmen } not got such teeth as their ancestors had;but-their sativa is tess abundant; ‘owing to the softer, pulpier foods that are eaten. People are living to an increasing ex- tent upon peptonized foods, The in- crease .of appendicitis is largely due to indigestion resulting from imper- fect mastication and the hurried meth- od of living. From the same cause people are less able to resist disease. Consequently there is greater reason for sanitary precautions, as injurious bacteria did a maximum of harm. He instanced various cases of danger- ous food contamination, and described the oyster as @ potential torpedo in the bowels. Referring to the recent outbreaks of typhoid fever in Westchester and Southampton, he said the disease could be traced to oysters. He attributed indifference and indolence to the pub- lie and culpable negligence to purvey- ors, and declared that if: legislation providing for stringent inspection of oyster beds was not passed, an incal- culable amount of typhoid fever was in store, All foods needed enforced protection from bacterial contamination, Anti- septicism must enter to some degree into the daily life of all and regulate shopping und cooking, VALUABLE ROCK DEPOSIT. faculti TUK SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ge, has most remarkable tonic proper- ties for all who live in malarial dis- tricts. A never-failing remedy for Ree ~ Ayer’s Malaria and Ague Cure all malarial diseases. - Missouri Professor Finds That Kan- eas City Has Stone That Will Make Good Cement, The History by Miss Ida M. Tarbell which began in the NOVEMBER McCLURE’S is the Great Story of Standard Oil. 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 verisimilitude that removes the tale from the dry statement and clothesit with the color of human interestand the yivid 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 intereeting 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. MecCLURE’S C . 10 cents & copy, $1.00 a year. Send us the dollar, at 145 East 25th Street, New York, or subscribe through your dealer. In the last two years the department of geology, chemistry, and civil engi- neering in Missouri university have been combining their efforts to deter- mine whether certain deposits in Mis- souri can be éonverted into cement of good quality. The work has gone far enough to enable them to say without hesitation that Kansas City combines large quantities of rock capable of pro- ducing cement that seems to be of ex- cellent quality,-and that deposits of cement rock of good quality have been found at other places in the state. When deposits are found that seem to contain good cement rock it is neces- sary to prove by process of manufac- turing that cement of good quality can be made out of the material. The stone has to be ground, mixed, burned, ground again, set, and then tested un- der the crushing machines. If success does not crown the first series of ex- periment they must be repeated with various modifications, until it is finally proved that good cement canor cannot be made out of the material. Experi- ments have proved that Missouri con- tains, at Kansas City and other places, immense deposits of rock that can be converted into Portland cement. TAKES A TUMBLE AND SMOKES. Bricklayer Falls Seven Stories and Lands Right Side Up and with Little Harm Done. _ a | ,» 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 Icts in Bates county. Choiee securities always on hand and for sale, Abstracts of title | farnished, titles examined and all kinds of real estate papers drawn. wt On the seventh floor of the skyserap- er hotel building which is being erect- ed on Clinton street, between Fulton and Pierrepont, Brooklyn, late the other afternodn a group of bricklayers were at work onthe outer wall of the structure. One of them was Luther Kerlin, who paused suddenly in his - i AA _ Hen. J. B. Newsucrt, 3.0. Onan his pipe. ‘TH prealtent, ‘Vice-President, Seo’y. trons, Kerlin borrowed a match, seratehed dno. C. Harns, Abstractor. 8. F. Wamrocx, Notary. it on a brick, and lighted his pipe. “Thank—” He did not finish, for in shifting his sition he slipped and fell. Thre: Ra a aassestincnbenciduphaeciuelindioannntds work and began pulling vigorously at. Fred Lewis, murderers of Detective here to-day from Colon, brings the Be Held. Schumacher, have taken refuge inthe pews of the suicideJanuary 30 of the} St. Louis, February 11,--Thous- nt Springs -Cave-on-the-Meramec~ ex revolutionagy general Uribe-Uribe, |80ds of investors, a large portion of river, about nine miles north of General Uribe Uribe published a letter | them being women and most of them Salem, in Dent county. | December 12 advising Columbia to|!rom the lower walks of life, surged _ Sheriff Jack and Constable Strode await the laping of the Panama|®bout the headquarters of the Turf have gone to investigate the = concession im 1904, which|Investment concerns this morning. brought here by farmers of that lo | would leave the Golumbia govern-|At the palatial offices of Arnold & ba a a ee oe ment 9 free band in the matter of the|©o. Clamoring applicants were told wo men, one tall, the othershort, ‘canal. The reports brought by the| that no money would be paid to-day. and one having his head bandaged, | Para indicate the possbility of an-|The Ryan International and other pasesd by Sligo,a furnace town of 600} other revolution in opposition to the | concerns paid dividends and demand people, five days ago. The man who} Panama canal treaty. ed thirty days’ notice of withdrawal had his head tied up remained in the Fe of the principal. edge af the town in the brush while OR Assistant Manager Foute of Ar- the other man went in and bought General Uribe-C ribe, the hero of 46 nold & Co. tated this morning fro provisions. The two men then pro- battles in Columbia, was defeated in voluntary baukruptcy proceedings ceeded to the Meramec river, about his last ite eggiand about three were contemplated, ‘but Manager five miles distant, and, finding this months ago. His troops were or Gill, after a long distance ‘phone talk cave, took lodging there, where they ed, he himeelf surrendered on promise with Arnold in Hot Springs, an- have remained ever since. Informa- ot pardon and — thrown into nounced that such a step would not tion was brougitt to Salem two days | PF'80®- hobswds died the hope of] 1,9 taken. Arnold and Ryan were ex- ago that these men were at the cave, the revolutioniate. pected here to-day to take charge of * and no attention was paid to the In personal appearance thegeneral/ fairs, but neither appeared. The matter. wae much like an American business statement of Manager Gill of BE. J. Two farmers in the locality of the man of +0-—t08, athletic, very serious} 4 enold & Co. has caused consterna- cave determined to investigate. and altogether different from the tion among the subscribers. Mr, Gill They we:t to the cavern after night conventional yo hmaegeerees J “hero” | said last night. and saw the men cooking their sup- of Spanish-American countries. “There is one feature of this com- per-away back in the cave. The pany which the general public appar- farmers watched them the next day ently fails tocomprehend. The sus- and the supposed robbers spent the St. Joseph, Mo., February 7.— pension of E, J, Arnold & Co. is ao day upon the hill above the cave, | Charley May,a double-murderer, who| more the suspension of Mr. Arnold where they could command a view of | 8 doomed to die on March 6, to-day | than it is of every otheasubscriber in the country for miles around. notified Sheriff Spencer that he eeri-| the company. Sligois25 miles from Potosi, where! OUsly objected to being banged on} ‘ppig js not a corporation in which the robbers abandoned their horser, | the same scaffold aud with the same| the jiubility of each stockholder is and the intervening country is very |?OP@ used in the execution of James} jim ited to the amount of the stock rough and thinly settled. The men| Pollard, a negro, who was confined |,ypscribed, but a co-operative part- could make their way back to Sligo|i® jail with May in 1-97. They dis-| nership, in which every subscriber is without much danger, as most of the| liked each other. Sheriff. Spencer re-/q partner. ; inhabitants in that country proba. | fused to comply with the request for| Hence every subscriber being a part- bly have never heard of the bank|® brand-new gallows, and May re-| por, ig liablefor the entire debts of robbery. Sligo is a furnace town|torted: “I'm ready to die, all right! ¢he partnership. which employs about 600 men,|¢#ough, but a white man isawhite! | mean that themanwho has $100 counting the woodcutters and min-|man and a nigger is a nigger, and] in this company is as much liable for ers, and there is a constant change of Missouri is too far south for a sheriff| the debts of the company as is Mr. workmen from Sligo to Flat river|© lose sight of it. I didn’t think) Arnold himself. If we finally find and back again, and people tramp- | Spencer was color blind that we are insolvent to the extent ing through the country would not of $100,000, then any one of our attract any notice or arouse suspi- subscribers is liable for the entire cion. Jefferson City, Feb. 6 —Representa-| amount.” tive Leonard of St. Louis introduced a bill in the house today to amend the law prohibiting gambling in the state. The new section says that Beat he nd ‘elfec’ ee every person who shall set up or sromal end soda » ng 250, 50e keep any table or gambling device, ang $1.00 bottle at H. L. Tucker's commonly called A. B.C. faro bank, | Drug Store. Keno, roulette, equality keno or any ee kind of a gambling table or device, Shot While he Was Asleep. shall, on conviction, be adjudged Ottawa, Kas., Feb. 12.—Elsie j guilty of a felony, and punishment is| Juckson, a young farmer living nine 5 Waats Sew Gallows. To Amend Gambling Laws. Are You Restless at Night And harassed by a bad cough? Use Ballard’s Horehound Syrup, it will The Treaty is Ratified. Washington, February 14.—The senate ratified the Alaska boundary treaty at an executive session, which lasted about an hour, There was practically no opposition to the ac- tion taken, although a few senators would not vote for the treaty. The treaty provides for the settle- ment of the dispute and was signed by Secretary Hay and Ambassador fixed at not less than two nor more/| miles northwest of Ottawa, was kill- 4 ‘Herbert January 24, The question than five years in the penitentiary,/ed by unknown persons last night will be submitted to a mixed tribunal | °° six months or one year in the] while he was asleep in his bed. The of jurists, ‘three on each side, to deter- county jail. . een affair is surrounded in mystery. mine the interpretation to be placed . . Mrs. Jackson went to a neighbor's upon the cae ct 1815 rh sea Average Anaual Wage of Kansas Coal scantily dressed at 5 o’cluck this Great Britain and Russia, which de- Miners. morning and said she had been fined the boundary between British| T b. 5.1 legial awakened by the report and flash of A seen, Be a aative agun. She found her husband dead pes | America and Alaska. That treaty |coal investigation. to-day the fact says the line runs from the southern-| was brought out that the average most point of Prince of Walesisland,|Kansas miner earns only $350 a in latitude 54.50, up Portland chan-| year. Witnesses wereexamined from nel to the 56th parallel of latitude; | among the ranks of miners and oper- thence along “the summit of the and an effort made to-day to by her side with a bullet hole in his head. No one was around the premises, but a tramp is said to have been prowling about the neighborhood stories down he crashed through the skylight of another building and kept on till he landed on the iop of an ele- vator cage. When the occupants looked up and saw Kerlin on top of the car they were astonished, He was sitting up rubbing his head and with his pipe still tightly clutched im his teeth. While they were at work getting him Twice: Every week. b The St. Louis — The Great Republican Paper of America. he Great News | Teoma, Globe Democrat ONE DOLLAR. A YEAR. th word erry Today ‘God Friday. Fulland correts mar to gather up his remains. “Say, Mike,” he said, “give me an- other match; my pipe is out again.” AMERICAN OARSMEN VICTORS. British Sailors Are Badly tendon in a Race with Tara of the United States. . Full and correct mar- The British battleship Glory and the American battleship Kentucky, hap- pening to be in thé harbor at Hong- Kong together, the crew of the Glory, who had heard that the crew of the Kentucky had a rowing reputation, and who believed themselves the crack oarsmen of the British squadron, challenged the Americdhs to row a race*with them. The crew of the Ken- tucky accepted the challenge, and'the British say they built a boat especially for the occasion. The course was five THE DAILY GLOBE-DEMOGRAT g ns equal or rival western newspapers, and ought to be in the vol avery reader of ANY daily paper, qmaizlaliamea Z1CE BY MAIL POSTACE PREPAID contains , 1,611,271 out three fellow bricklayers rushed in “23 Sunday miles, The Americans jumped into i Without Edition the lead at the start, and kept gaining £8 saat year - . 48 to 60 Pages. - until at the finish they were a full mile ; 3. months 2. year - $2.00) in the lead. Several American steam- 1.50/38 months aes —- PAE —_ a that it was going to result in the defeat = s of the British, and each of them hoist- ' ; \] ed a broom at the masthead, to signify 24 3 5 that the Americans had swept the 8 weak : t British off the sea. Fy ‘be held at St. Lonis in and the greatest St, Louis ee AS See Aces et! ae °, ‘The irrigated area of ‘the United/ media institute condemnation per will be the coming year. | gates ix 1510500 acren ‘of whlch [proowdit for several days. It is not believed that any robbery was committed. Officers and newspaper men have gone to the scene of the murder. Jackson was about 30 years old and had recently been married the second time. _He was well liked in the neighbor- hood and had no enemies. mountains parallel to the coast” to|get at the cause of the coal famine. the 141st meridian of westlongitude;|The operators said much Kansas thence along that meridian to the] coal was shipped out of the state and “frozen sea.” that on account of the scarcity in Canada wants the line to run near-|the Indian Territory and Colorado er the coast and across deep bays. | much coal that had been exported Washington, February 14.—The|from the state could not be obtained senate probably would have ratified} this winter. : the Greek treaty for the regulation aera ye of commerce with the United States, if Senator Hoar, of Massachusetts, had “not. objected. Senator Hoar said he wanted an opportunity to read it carefully before giving his as- sent to it. Venezuela Will Pas It. Stops the Cold and Works Washington, February 14.—Ac- Cold. cording to instructions receivedfirom}| Laxative Bromo-Quinine the German foreign office, Baron von |CUre & cold in one day. No Sternberg Thursday morning formal- Dey: kee oe ly demanded of Minister Bowen pay- Either One May Marry Again. ee ment by Venesuela of $340,000 in v Fe The date for the meeting of the| {five equal monthly installments, the| Dresden, Saxony, Feb. 14.—The people of the state at Jefferson City {first to become due two weeks after decree of divorce granted to Crown for publicly rejoicing over the extin- signing of protocol. Prince Frederick yesterday permite been fed for March 12, 1908,| Although he considers this demand | Poth Parties to, mary again. The {| extortionate, Bowen will accede to it |CTOWD Place eke Jeroen ppdedeaded Aad — on ed Miners oa es separation of bed and board, butthe ‘ the house of representatives Thurs-|in the interest of peace, Germans 4 day afternoon March 12. Presiding | agreeing with the other powers to |°*-Tow" princess asked for an abso- ol , Govery A. M. Dockery; secre- lifting of blockade immediately upon lute divorce, which the judges decid- taries, Cornelius Roacn, eg the signing of the protocol 26 ed they could not refuse under the i , new civil code which King George the senate, and Joseph Tril, clerk of the house of representatives. —_—_—_——— 3 He Was a V of Two Wars. himself designated as governing the : proceedings. The princess, however, Governor Dockery, Liéutenant Gov. Cocke Bon Whitecotton, Senator ; Senator Vest and Senator-| Lexington, Mo., Feb. 14.—Major| cannot marry Giron and getrecogni- $ elect Stone will speak. Timothy S. Chandler, 76 years old,|tion of her marriage under the Ger- : 7” anaes here iast night. | man law. , Major was a soldier in : P evel 7. Rs a Colonel Doniphan’s regiment that Cattle Dying in the Snow. marched from Missouri to Mexico in| Bonesteel,S. D., Feb. 12.—Stock- 184: and participated in many of the| men from the range-country report t battles fought in that war. Healso/that cattle are perishing by hun~ served four years in the Confederate|dreds. A Tripp county man lost ceedings sgainst all owners .of| army. He was very active for an| mare than 300 steers. Thedeep snow ht-ol-way in Henry county with|/aged man and was iil only a few|began about fifty miles west of here eye OM tag: 2s sven days. He leaves a wile and two chil-| and the entire range for 100 miles in Johnson: county, a8 con-) o°e2- Judge Joseph G. Chinn, of Lex-| west of that point is covered with sors are anxious to get to work] ington, is now only the Mexican war| snow two fest deep making it impose 2 sible for stock to secure food. off the Tablets cure, no - The Moulton, . Rock , came over from Chil- howee the part of last week and remained for'a few days. Tues- he went to Windsor and will im- te the weather will pormit, | veteran left living in this county.

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