The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, March 19, 1903, Page 3

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 Forget **soda cracker’’—the dry kind that’s sold in paper bags. the name ‘‘soda biscuit’’ or and dusty There’s only one kind worth having— Sold only in In-er-seal Packages. NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY Harness and Saddlery, Buggies and Surries, Read Wagons aad Spring Wragons. Wagon Harnes $10 to $30; Single Harness $7 and uricen, Buss, Tops, Cushions, Wao Suevts and Bows. sm and see na: get in ntiees and van will anrely trade with to $25; Second-hand Hurness $3 to $15; Saddles, all styles Our Vebieles ure the latest in design and painting. McoFARLAND BROS,, Butler, Mo Cold in One Day ov-z.. Tae Laxative Bromo Quinine tuies. 2 7% on every Seven Million bores sold in past 12 months. Twice Every week. The St. Louis The Great Republican Paper of America. The Great News ONE DOLLAR A YEAR. Almost-equal to a daily at the price ofa weekly. The latest telegraphic news from ull the world every Tuesday and Friday. Full and correct mar- ket reports. a vreat variety of interesting and instructive reading matter for everymember of the family. Unequaled as a newspaper and home journal. Two papers every week. One Dollara Year Sample copies free. THE DAILY GLOBE-DEMOGKAT Has na equal or rival among western Dewspapers, and ought to be in the hauds of every reader of ANY daily paper. PRICE BY MAIL POSTACE PREPAID Daily Daily ® Sunday , Including Sunday. Without Sunday Edition Ono year $6.00\One year $4.00} 48 to 60 Pages. 6 months 3.006 months 2.00 One year $2.00 8 months 1.00 1.50/83 months THE GREAT WORLD'S FAIR Will be held at St. Louis in 1904, and the greatest St, Louis newspzper will be indespensible during the coming year. SUBSCRIBE TO-DAY. 1.00.6 months | The Globe Printing Co. St. Louis, Mo. |: 2: Board Managers Appointed Jefferson City, March 10.—Gov. Dockery hastade the following ap pointmerits: Board of managers of the Confed erate soldiers home, Higginsville; Henry Newman, Huntsville; James Bannerman, St. Louis; N. M. Copper, Higaiusville; for terms ending Febra ary 1, 1905, Frank L. Pitts, Paris; F. B. Murdock, Platte City, for termes ending February 1, 1907. : Order of Publication. STATS OF MISSOURI, ) 33 County or Bates, In the Probate court for the county of Bates, November term, 192. Elizabeth \\ eldon, de ceased, L Q Robards, Executor Order of Publication. Now at this day comes L Q Robards ,executor of the estate of Klizabeth Weldon dec'd, and pre- sents to the court his petition, praying for-an- order for the sale of 80 much of the real estate of said deceased as will pay and satisfy the re- maining debts due by said estate, and yet unpaid for want of sufficient asasets accompanied by the accounts, lists and inven- tories as required by law; on examination whereof it is ordered, that all persons interest- ed in the estate of said deceased, be notified that application as aforesaid has been made, and uniess the contrary be shown on or before the first day of the May term of this court to be held on the second Monday of May, A. D., 1908, an order will be made for the sale of the whole, er 60 much of the real estate of said de- deased as will be sufficient for the payment of said debts and legacies and it is further order- ed that thisorder be published in some news- Pes rin Bates county, Missouri, for four weeks re the said May term of this court, and that a copy of this order be served on each of the heirs of deceased, residing in Bates county, Missouri, aforesaid, at least ten days prior te the first day of the said May term of this court STATE OF MISSOURI, a6. County of Bates, » I, J. A. Silvers, judge of the court, held in and for said county, hereby cer- tify that the foregoing is a true copy of the original order of publication therein referred to, aa the same appears of record in m: office. Witness my band and of said (seat] court. Done at office in Butler, Bates county, Missouri, this 7th day of Feb- J, A, SILVERS, Judge of Probate. robate Returns Thanks Before Leaving. Paris, March 14.—President Fran- cis of the St. Louis exposition has written a letter to M. Trouillot, min- ister of commerce, in which he ex- presses his appreciation of the court- esies, official and personal, of which he was the object during his recent visit to Paris. He refers to the two banquets given in his honor as cere- monies that he will long remember, while the presents made to Mrs. Francis and himself as souvenirs of anevent, the memory of which will long remain, will be treasured as pre- cious heirlooms of his family. He concludes with a cordial invitation to the minister to visit the St. Louis exposition, to which the government and its minister of commerce are 80 efficiently contributing. President Francis sailed for New York Wedneaday on the Kron Prinz Wilhelm and is expected to reach New York about March 18. Histrip has been brilliantly successful. At London, Paris, Berlin, Madrid, Brus- sels and other points he has been re- ceived with marks of diatinguished consideration. He has made a most favorable impression every where and given new life and impetus to the in- terest in the St. Louis World's Fair. There is no doubt that his trip will result in better exhibits from central Europe at the great exposition in 1904, Children’s Coughs and Colds, Mrs. Joe McGrath, 427 L. Ist St., Hutchinson, Kan., writes: “I have given Ballard’s Horehound Syrup to my children for coughs and colds for the past four years, and find it the best medicine I ever used.” Unlike many cough syrups, it contains no opium, but will soothe and-heal any disease of the throat or lungs quick er than any other remedy. 250, 50c and $1.00 at H. L. Tucker's Drug Missourians Going to Cuba, Mexico, Mo., March 14.—A delega- tion of citizens of this section of the state left here for Cuba to see the country and to consider the advis- ability of investing in sugar lands. The party was composed of R. M. White, of the Mexico Ledger; WV. D. Thomas, of the Fulton Sun; J. E. Jameson, a real estate dealer, and J. B. Boulware, an attorney, also of Fulton, and S. Harrison, a real estate man at McCredie, Mo. They expect to be gone about three weeks So Sweet and Pleasing in Taste! Mrs. C. Peterson, 625 Lake St., Topeka, Kan., speaking of Ballard’s Horehound Syrup, savs: “It has never failed to give entire satisfac- tion, and of all cough remedies, it is my favorite, and I must confess to my-manyfriends that it will do, and has done, what is claimed for it—to speedily cure a cough or a cold; and it is so sweet and so pleasing in\ taste.” 25e, 50¢ and $1.00 botth t | Ht. L. Tucker's Drug Store. They Fear the Labor Vote. | London, March 14.—Some of the | Conservative papers in-their editor-} i | inls Thursday morningexpressalarm | at the growing power of the labor | vote as shown by the result of the | Woolwichelection. “It means,” says | the Times, “that the scepter that has | hypnotized the continental govern- | ments has shown itselt at lastamong ourselves.” The country is urged by the Con- servative press to take warning to! heart and oppose those tendencies | which in the United States and on the continent-of-Europe—heveled-to+ lamentable conflicts between the exe- | ecutive authority and the working | classes. $100 Reward $100. The readers ot this paper will be pleas- | ed to learn that there is at least one| dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitution- al disease, requires, a constitutional teatment. Hall’s Caarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces ot the sys- tem, therebv destroying the foundation ot the disease, and giying the patient | strength by building up the constitution | and assisting nature in doing its work, The proprietors haye so much faith in its curative powers, that they offer One Hundred Doliars for any case that it tails to cure. Send tor list of testimon- jals. Address F, J. Curnay & Co., Tviedo, O. g@pSold by drugzit 7c t Store, | Rode soo Miles to Whip Him. NOW IF YOU STEAL A CHICKEN. Chattanooga, Tenn., March 14 — W. J. Pistor, of Cincinnati, and CL. It’s a Felony in Missouri and the Law Watson, of Chicago, were the partici panta in a sensational fight in the corridor of the Read hotel Wednes-| Jefferson City, Mo., March 13.— day morning. Both are traveling | Thesenate bill to make chicken steal- men. They have been acquainted for ing a_felonycame_up in the house some time. A few days ago Watson | yesterday. Hays talked for the bill. heard that Pistor had made an un-| Lee, of Mississippi, declared thut the complimentary remark about 4 Wo-| pill proposed to take away the “con- man friend of his residing in Louie- stitutional rights of the coon.” He ville. He decided to punish Pistor| appealed to the house to treat the and started \f-gearch of him. He| negro well and was called upon to fallowed him {from Louisville to this | expiain where he had stood on the city. \Pistor was knocked down, his | «Jim Crow” car bill. Lee said he had face badly lacerated besides losing | yoted for the bill and kept his record several teeth. Before leaving the| straight, but he did not believe in be- city Watson declared that he would ing too severe on the negro. Shelby whip Pistor every time they met. of Lafayette said he had a better rea- son than any other member for sup- porting the measure. He told of the me E. Simpson, 509 Craig St ,| murder of a Lafayette man by two noxville, Tenn., writes June 10th, | chicken thieves and when questioned 1899: “I have been trying the baths ‘ : ; of Hot Springs, Ark., for sciatic about the affair by Shepherd said the rhuematism, but I got more relief | murderers “received a just fate at from Ballard’s Snow Liniment than | the hands of my people.” avy medicine or anything I haveever! Pyncan said the farmers who live tried, Enclosed find postoftice order close to small towns suffer at the for $1.00. Send 1 bottle b ww: hn tet go hd hands of chicken thieves and such a Southern Express” Sold by H. L Tucker. \ law would protect them. Eversole UR RON EO SE said it would be foolish to make it a Overland Limited Wrecked. penitentiary offense to steal a chick- Omaha, Neb., March 14.—TheOver-|n. Any lawyer knew that it requir- land Limited, eastbound, nnd aweat- | ed several months after an arrest to bound freight train on the Union get the man tried and in his opinion Pacific, collided head-on at Gilman | the bill would simply mean addition- station, twelve miles west of here, at al costs for the state and little or no 1 o’clock Thursday morning. The better protection for the farmers, fireman on the freight’ is buried | The bill passed, yes 81, no "1, beneath the wreckage and is suppos- —_ ed to be dead. Two other trainmen | jroquois Club's Dinner Promises to Be are reported killed, A number ofthe passengers are reported injured, A wrecking crew aud a corps ofdoctors | Chicago, March 14.—The Jackson have gone to the scene of the wreck. | Day banquet at the Auditorium, to Gilman is merely a switching station | je given by the Iroquois Club on and there is no night operator there. | Mareh 14, promises to be notable. Says Penitentiary. Cures Sciatic Rhuematism. Notable. poo'The sperkere-who-heve eonsented CASTORIA. | P to make addresses include Edward * The Kind You Have Always | | pees : : poe | M. Shepard, of New York, Senator @ y EA | Bailey, of Texas, Congressman De- Armond, of Missouri, Joseph Har- Mexico No Longer a Boodlers’ Refuge. | wen of Clectnnat, age a Ai Dickinson, representing Tennessee Washington, March 14,—Senator | the natal State of Andrew Jackson Cullom reported and had passed the Mayor Harrison, of Chicago, Presi- treaty with Mexico making bribery | dent Ingalls, of the Big Four Rail an extraditable offense. This isthe road, and candidate for Mayor of treaty negotiated at the suggestion Cincmnati, and Samuel Alschuler, the of Circuit Attorney Folk, of St. Lonis, Democratic nominee for Governor of Senator Cullom, as chairman of the [llinois at the last election. foreign relations committee, made | Letters regretting their inability some inquiries as to the attitude of | tobe present have been received from the Senate toward the treaty and | Richard Olney, David B, Hill and found that it could ve passed in ove | Henry Watterson. Letters also of the lulls in the discussion of the have been sent by ex- President Clever canal treaty without creating debate | ]ind, General Nelson A. Miles and or a dissenting vote. Judge Lambert Tree, which will be pread at the dinner CASTORIA. Beas te The Kind You Have Always Bought sabibiavingaeiineeacnaiinaad am fGen $5,000,000 Store For Wanamaker. March -t4—E. KR, | Graham, representing D. H. Burn- jham & Co, aos ——— Philadelphia, He Shot at Passing People. architects, has secured a | building permit authorizing the con- | struction of a new department store {for John Wanamaker, to cost $5,- H00,060,...1t is tobe erected on the Syracuse, N. Y., \ arch 14 —After sitting ina window of a fashionable apartment house and taking shots at the people passing in James street below, Henry (Friend held a party |") ‘i : of policemen at bay for an hour with site of his present establishment. a big revolver. Then, forcing the | The building will be 12 stories janitor to rol! cizarettes, Friend peers a AR bea Ig played the piano with his left hand enil of 250 feet on Market and Chest- and held the gun in his right Soon jae Bireeee thereafter Friend turned onthepiano stool, placed the revolver to his breast and sent a bullet through his heart. He was 26 years old. The interior fiuishings are to be of San Domingo and East India ma- | hogany, the floors to be of marble, rubber, Mosaie and white maple, on biaiiatarcdiaeieml la fireproof basis, It is proposed to CABSTORIA. tear down the present building and build the new one in s-ctions. Bears the The Kind You Have Always Bought | of a A Physician Writes. Public Ownership For Rich Hill. Rich Hill, Mo., March 13.—ihis city will soon own its own water, gas and electric lighting plants as the re sult of a special election which was held here Wednesday. At present the frauchises for these plants belong to and are uperated by the Rich Hill Water, Light & Fuel company. The plants cost this company $105,000 with bonds of $130,000. The city now buys the plants for $55,000, embracing besides the plants many miles of gas and water mains and arc lights. Out of 542 votes cast at the election only twenty-three were against the proposition. “Lam desirous of knowing if the | profession can obtain Herbine ir vulk for prescribing purpose-? 1 has been of great use to me in trea ing cases of dyspepsia brought by excesses or overwork, | he never known it to fall in restor’ the organs affected, to their he i ful activity.” 50e bottle at HH. Tucker's Drug Store, C. E. ROBBINS, Amorett, Mo., AUCTIONEER Willery sales in Bates and adjoining coum at reasonable price. lisfaction positive guarantee or no charg de. Several yer. of experience in Iowa. Can give best of refer ences, A share of your patronage solicitec Dates can be given at this office “2-2m* The Oniy Liniment That Why ? BECAUSE IT HAS CURED EVERY HURT OF IAN OR BEAST THAT CAN BE CURED BY A GOOD, HONEST, PENETRATING LINIMENT. Has Held The Farmers’ Faith For MEXICAN MUSTANG LINIMENT. ‘Two Generations. It is the pioneer of liniments, It has stood the test of time. The more people use it the more faith they have in it. It is just as good to relieve your pains to-day as it was to relieve the aches and pains of your grandfathers over sixty years ago. ‘

Other pages from this issue: