The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, April 9, 1903, Page 10

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SE LESS EAGER ; BOARD OF EQUILIATIN. CST ER’S as tons GHEE Noah ence to Matrimony. CASH GROCERY ee crease in the Number of Mar- . riages and Tells the Is the place to buy your groceries, we carry & fresh Beassu Shanes clean stock of the best quality of goods and sell Ascsntiog 10 bie See. Con. them at the lowest prices. Remember we sell aia D. Teorted tee magn om iller’ hips. ber of marri licenses issued Miller’s potato chips bumber narsags cenen ied SALT AND SMOKED MEATS fewer than in the previous year by 2,000 or more is due to the rapidly increas. LIK£ MODERN HOTRLA. Parisians Have Changed Theil? Meth= eds of Dining—Restaurants No Longer Popular. rsity Likel — pena ti — The following are the changes made te i ana in the assessment of real and per- sonal property in Batescounty, Mo., by the County Board of Equalization, April 6, 7, and 8, 1903. All landsin the following town- Grand River township, land 10 per cent Deer Creek “ ee 5 per cent Mound ie vad 10 per cent Spruce vii - 10 per cent Deep Water ** e 10 per cent Charlotte “ oo 10 per cent t 5 + The closing of the famous Maison Doree at Paris recalls the fact that, while in London the fashion of din- ing at restaurants is on the increase, the tendency in the French capital is toward the development of the at- tractions of public hotels and private mansions. The miles of magnificent new houses in the Passy quarter and around the avenues branching away from the Place de l'Etoile, all possess- ing fine kitchens, are occupied by wealthy people, whose chefs in every Prof. Sommerville indignant Because Mattings Were Removed from the Entrance to the Buddhist Temple in Museum. There are, or rather were, two pieces of Japanese matting in the free mu- seums of the University of Pennsyl- vania which are likely to cost that in- stitution some thousands of dollars. On account of these mats Prof. Som- ase an ba . rain’ “ 5 percent 18 seaso! ear. ing number of young woman who merville, whose donations in past ai stony : al oe caption owe Hedsoe vy a ¥o per ernst Are what you want at this a of e y have acquired) a business college edu- . . . i e “a ‘ " years have enriched the university, has provided roy Tosheveed poor te Prairie is bead age Come in and try them, you will come for more cation and are, therefore, fully altered his will and by a codicil cut Pennsylvania out of a handsome be- quest. The fellowing property in city of Butler, Mo., was raised: Wyatt & Son all block 7 from 95000 to $3500 Jno Steele south 2% feet lot 4 block equipped to enter the lists of the com- SEED POTATOES, GARDEN SEED. mercial world and earn @ comforte- ble livelihood, at fancy prices. This is for the resi- dent, but visitors to Paris now find in the modern hotels all their most ; i led to endurea | en ee luxurious tastes and inclinations | 10 from _ meme We can supply your wants in these with the best, a ae Bog ce preg A ¢ ple, which is a part of the Maxwell | [it tht ‘Smeniel was week 108 Tm wo t00 purest quality in any quantity you desire. out a fixed income, while waiting for Sommerville collection in the west) 4) ay seek out a restaurant, Enor- | Paul Bengech all lot 4 block 18 8800 to 4000 an eligible ig man to tum up wing of the museum. Prof. Sommer- ville, who holds the chair of glypt- ology and whose collection of precious AE DeBow 47x98 feet block 2 Mont- gomery’s addition from 300 to 600 M H Fox all block 13 Montgomery's mous prices may have been paid for dinners in former times, but the guests were limited in number, and FLOUR, FEED. with a propostl of marriage, the aver- age young woman of the industrial Our flour is the best on-the market, every sack is | classes, Dr. Conway avers, now bas ems which he recently donated to the 2nd addition from 650 to 900 i a substantial position to occupy her University is among the rarest in the > nae ton roy i eon ee harem his te fully guaranteed. We handle all kinds of feed. time and to enable her to be inde- world, is also a deep student of Bud- | © . . ven, : a pendent. Ghism in Japan, and has built « com | fie ‘ahe clever caterers have multi| “aenativain © © ©/FOR CANDIES, CRACKERS, Leaders of society in this ety agree plete temple in a room to the noth of | pieq in all directions. TJ Day middle thi:d bik 9 Couches ’ with Dr, Conwell that the decrease in sg gay ce as ead’ from bs gage Pickles, coffee, tea and dried fruits we have every- | the number of marriages has been Concerning the exactness of detailin] FIRED AT HIS REFLECTION, | sectinger south half lot 2 block ’ ’ : ; confined to the industrial classes. this temple the professor is justly hoa tdcetelvieo amen ae eo thing you want and can satisfy your desire. Just a Creatine , nana eaid 4 roud andextremely particular. Noth- | utah Miner on His Way East for Firat | 0 A Heinlein south half of wes! a : y that there n no apparen: ne in the promenade touched with-| Time Creates Panic in Pullman bik 9 Coneh’s add’n from R.. to 200 give us a call, see our goods and get our prices and change in the fashionable spring end out his permission, and he is especially Car Barber Shop. aha ry tence pricy sega a you will be pleased with what we can do for you. autumn marriages, but on the other careful that the curators of other sec- ieplgaieg btyeiek vy ae hand there had perhaps been more tions of the museum, suchas theAmer-| A Utah miner created g sensation on ag ry «0 to 50} North Side Square. engagements announced during the ican Indian and Malay archipelago col- | Union Pacific train No. 2 the other | cy penter & Shafer west side block Jim’s Old Stand e ’ last year than for several years, lections, shall not meddle with the] night shortly after leaving Sidney, 7 eld town from 2000 to 3000 | Y LM" and. The books of the marriage license e sanctity of his Buddhist reproduction, | Wyo, In conversation with passengers | 4 8 Culver west half lot 8 block be ‘an Ce bureau show wm, eae the teat Possessing such ideas on the subject, | he said he lived 116 miles from the near- Williame Ist add’n from 25 to aie dite that last month broke all reco: ‘or his indignation was great when he | est railroad, and had not seen a train | Tw Arnold west halt fot 3 block 2 LLLLLLLLLLLLLLL LLL EL EL ELLE Serubes te ta tae te returned recently after an absence of | of cars for 12 years. He was enroute} Williams let add’n from 00 to 900 reau, and June, “the month of brides,” some time from the university and | east to visit relatives, whom he had not Ww pls oy oalagaaalar or se went far beyond the average this found that the matting had been re-| seen since childhood. He had made a |, be Soy head “alg ee , ) year, Dan Cupid has been caught nap- moved from the entrance, Just who | fortune in mining in Utah, he said, and v Walleye 44's persed 8800 to 5000 : ping. took the strips away the professor | he proposed to have a hot time in the | 5 ) pyeringham 61-2 acres north 1 ] er S Although one day toward the end has not told, but there is a suspicion | east. main street from 3500 to 5000 »f May more than 130 licenses were issued, this being the greatest single day’s record since the bureau was es tablished in 1885, there was a steady falling off of requests for licenses com- pared day by day with the previous years. “The secret of the decrease in mar- riage licenses,” Dr. Conwell said, “may be attributed, in my opinion, to the significant fact that throughout the city the business colleges are turm ing out thousands of young women . trained for the playing of an active part in the commercial world. “The young woman of to-day, who formerly had little or no income, is no longer dependent upon the love of some young man she may be fortu- nate enough to win. There was a time when a girl of the working classes was threatened with poverty and was con- fronted with grave perile until she married, and often she would give herself to the first eligible man who chanced to come her way. “Now she is well equipped with a practical business education and is in- dependent She is able to support her- self, and there is nothing to force her into matrimony.” t _A NEW UNIVERSITY. Teachings of Indiana Insti¢utien Will Depart Somewhat from Lines of Other Schools. that another section of the museum could tell if it wanted to. The irate professor brooded over the indignity for some time, and then de- cided to change his will. He did this, he stated to a friend, because he did not think his work had been appre- t ciated. As Prof, Sommerville is a very rich man and as his work has been centered in the university, it is ru- mored that the bequest which the codicil wipes away was a very large one, too large, university men say, to be sacrificed for a couple of pieces of matting. si _ NEW ELECTRIC SIGNAL. Steamehipas to Be Equipped with Sya- tem Which Will Facilitate Com- hf munications at Night. The Utah man partook freely of champagne and other beverages dur- ing the trip, and felt fine. Shortly after leaving Sidney he went into the buffet car to get shaved. Getting into the chair he looked at his reflection in the mirror a moment and then drew a six-shooter and fired two shots at his image. The bullets went through the side of the car and did no further damage. The passengers were badly frightened, for they feared they were in the pres- ence of a madman. When asked why he fired the shots, the Utahan replied that he was “just thinking.” He had between $1,000 and $2,000 in bills on his person, POPULAR GIRL TURNS JOKE. Young Woman Finds Beaux Had Bet aa to Which Would Be Her Es- cort and Invites All, S L Bales east baiflot 106, Adrian, Mo., from 950 to 1200 The following personal property was raised; Mingo township horses 20 per eent West Boone " 25 per cent Shawnee a 15 per cent Summit “” 20 per cent Homer “" 15 per cent Elkbart mules ‘20 per cent Deer Creek “ 20 per cent West Boone bist 15 per cent Elkhart * 80 per cent Spruce 9 40 per cent Mt Pleasant boc 5 per cent Charlotte “ 5 percent Honer ad 5 per cent Walnut “ 10 per cent Rockville ad ‘30 per cent Prairie sd 90 per cent Osage ai 25 per cent Kast Boone cattle 15 per cent West Boone S 15 per cent Mound bs 10 percent Shawnee * 15 per cent Spruce is 15 per cent Summit " 15 per cent Mt Pleasant sg 10 per cent Charlette ” 80 per cent New Home bog 20 percent Rockyille bid % per cent Prairie "= 80 per cent STATE OF MISSOURI, Country er Barzs, I, J. ©. Herrell, clerk of the County Court, do hereby certify the above and foregoing to be & true and correct copy of the proceedings of the Board of Equalization. In testimony whereof I hereunto [Seat] set my hand and affix the seal of said court, Done at office in But ler, this 10th day of April, 1903, J. F, HERRELL, County Clerk. New Music Store —ON THE— WEST SIDE SQUARE, Are handling everything known to music. A ae a NR a We are also handling the reliable imball Pianos and Creans The celebrated Estey Organ, and other well known makes, fully guar- Arrangements have been completed by which the steamship Deutschland, of the Hamburg-American line, will be equipped with a system of electric bg night signals, which, it is said, will show any letter or number so visibly i that it can be seen for five or six miles ng at sea. The inventors assert that not. i only does it offer better signal facili- ties than the flare light and lantern system now in use, but that it also records every signal which is trans- mitted. iW The system is an expansion of the : electric carriage signals now in use at the Metropolitan opera house, New York, and, like its predecessor, is the } invention of Mortimer Norden, an elec- i trical engineer of New York. The sig- t nal board will be placed on each side of the grillroom roof of the Deutsch- ‘l and, and the letters and figures will a be ten feet high. It is asserted that hi with the aid of the night glass the sig- nals will be visible for nearly seven wiles. In describing his invention, Mr. Nor- den said: “It is many times quicker than the other methods now in use, and opportunities for mistakes are greatly lessened. One advantake which was quickly recognized by the steam- ship companies was the value of the oa records of signals which can be kept. Seven carriages drove up to the home of Miss Carrie Borger at 1245 Madison avenue, New York city, at seven o’clock the other night, and a young man hopped out of each, pre- pared to take Miss Borger to the the ater. Each young man had received this note from her: “I have two tickets for the theater on Saturday evening. I would like you to be a brother to me and, act as my escort. Please do not tell any of the boys.” Each young man was nonplused when he saw six others at the house. Then Miss Borger explained. She had heard that the young men had made & bet among anaes as to which Piano Tuning. one would first have the honor of | To whom it may concern: taking her to a theater in 1903. This certifies that the bearer, F. Miss Borger decided to outwit them |M. Skaggs, has done considerable and take them all to a theater her-| work for us, and we always found self. She had a big automobile wait- | his tuning and repairing perfectly ing, and, with some girl companions, |done. We consider him an honest they went to a Harlem theater. After | and perfectly reliable workman and the theater there was a supper at | anyone entrusting work to his care Miss Borger’s house. are sure it will be donesatisfactorily gers a W. W. Krupa & Co. TO PATROL ATLANTIC COAST. | Manufacturer of pianos and organs, Il. By W. H. Correr. One of the Most Important Develop- ve orders at Mrs. Endres’ anteed. As we buy in car load lots, for three large stores, we get a big discount and can sell you cheaper than the person who is handling two or three pianos and A number of capitalists of eastern Indiana, among whom are George*F. McCulloch, president ‘of the Union Traction company, and Walter A. Bell, state senator, incorporated the Palmer university, which is to be located at Muncie. The articles state that the object of the incorporators is “to give espe- cial emphasis to the matchless truth of God, of Christ, of psychology, of Christian ethics, and all to the peer- less end of bringing the students into harmony with the divine administra- tion of the immutable laws of their y being, and thus develop the creature man into a symmetrical manhood that will meet the approval of his organs on commission. We will sell on TERMS TO SUIT YOU OLD INSTRUMENTS TAKEN IN EXCHANGE for new. Come and see us. We expect to stay in Butler and make our store the best of its kind in Bates county and will make good everything sold. Creator, God.” Such records would put a stop to all “ae a. eT | AN A D RC ANS TUNED The teachers of the university will g lengthy disputes over questions _—__-— represent a departure from the lines F, ceo not certain signals had One of the most important devel- of other institutions —in— ‘opments of the new system of navat = mobilization adopted by the navy de- partment is the establishment of coast division of the north Aflantic Its duty will be to patrol the Atlantic coast. Rear Admiral J. H. Sands, now in command of the League island navy yard, will be given the command, with the battle- ship Texas as his flagship, the squad- ron including the monitors Puritan, Amphitrite, Miantonomah, Terror, Arkansas and the monitors Nevada and Florida as soon as they are com- missioned, together with the torpedo- boat destroyers Decatur and Chaun- cey, half @ dozen torpedo-boats com- a torpedo-boat flotilla and the submarine Holland and subma- the theories of evolutionary develop- ment, mental, race, or, in other words, that man js a creature of law; but the teachings must nevertheless be emphatically Christian, yet non- denominational and nonsectarian. “God, Christ, Manhood,” is the motto of the institution, and char acter, not human theology, is made the test of its fellowship. Equal privileges are to be accorded to males and females. The ¢ontrol is vested in 12 trustees, cight of whom form & quorum. FOUR-POUND GEM FOR POPE. . Catholics Preparing to Give His Holt- ness the Largest Topas in the World. Catholics in every part of the world are preparing to show their devotion Dell yon cms nsrbem, f feeicreaae ~W (Millet and Kaffir Corn. end of the celebration of bis sliver Reclean flax Seed for Seeding. him an almost pricelese Jewel Tha fa a topaz weighing nearly four Wheat, Corn, . the largest in the world. Itisnowin— Y the hands of skilled workmen in Rome, Abvape dong Ween 38 depen sper. also, at the west side of the square. W. C, CLEMENT, Mavacer. PARISIANS SEEK CHEAP LIGHT. An Effort Being Made ¢o Have Mu- aleipal Council Reduce Charge for Electricity. SLLLLL SLPS LL LL LLL LL LLL LL LLL EPL O PPP PPLE PLP LPL LLLP PELL PLP After a struggle for cheaper gas Parisians have now turned their atten- tion to cheaper electricity. In the original concessions to the electric light companies the maximum price was fixed at 15 centimes a hectowatt, but the companies by charging for meters, connections, etc., have man- aged to create a charge to the extent of 100 francs a year. In renewing the contracts the municipal council pro- poses to get even by fixing the maxi- mum price at eight centimes and elim- (nating the incidental charges. Worthy Succeaser af Minlater Wu. Gx 5KSSSSSSSSSSSKSSSSSSSSSSSSASSSSSSSSSSSSESSESSESESSE SBS i= ® ® ® # es ® ® : ® 2 WE WANT TO Clover Seed, Rape Seed, i g F i z fe fi ii the pocenat presen be to glad 3 i i

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