The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, July 30, 1903, Page 3

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Chew retore [COST A PRETTY SUM. T0 TEACH SCIENTIFIC LIVING. | ; Which Was Unique in the ries of lectures in Paris on the psy- Cut Out The Middle Man. Annals of Werld. chology of the modern woman from the Nine tenths of the people are looking for this. Now that the magnificence of the] view. He was the manager of the Re- Now we have the largest the cost. Including the bill the In- arness aud Ceremonies at Durbar Required Ex- liver Lectures. penditure of $10,000,000. ae Dr. Paul Valentin, a leading special- | UTLER, MISSOURI. sae, moeeee Siete Fey ae OS tua At proces we > eg 2 Oo | CASH CAPITAL : - $55,000. MISSOURI STATE BANK, Surplus Funds and Profits, - 9,820. Established A. D. 1880. normal and the pathologic point of vue de Psycologie Clinique et Thera- Total Deposits April 15, 1903, $234,264.35. peutique for five years and is the au- thor of numerous scientific, philosoph- ie and critical essays. Dr. Valentin says: “Definite knowledge of the female durbar has gone, people are counting Receives deposits, loans money, makes collections and does dian government will have to pay, the a general banking business e solicit the business of mer- expenditures incurred by the Indian chants, farmers stock dealers, and the public generally, promising them absolute security for deposits and every pos- sible accomodation cousistent with safe banking rules, organism and brain allow us to assert . fd princes and chiefs and the English governors and lieutenant governors, 4 4 atte it is safe to say that at least $10,000,- 000 has been spent in furnishing a@ ——DIRECTORS:—— that the evolution of the woman of to- Dr. T. C. Boulware J. R. Jenkins, Frank M. Voris, spectacle unique in the annals of the day tends toward the more perfect. util- John Deerwester A. B, Owen, Wm. E. Walton world. izing of the marvelous resources with Dr. J. M. Christy ©. R_ Radford Dr. N. L. Whipple In Southwest Mo. The Indian government's bill is like- which nature has endowed her. The C, H. Dutcher Geo, L. Swith T J. Wright. : ly to exceed $3,750,000, The cost to] most recent developments of psycho- J.R. ba trie J. ghia Wa. EB. pO md bY and can duplicate any goods Lord Curzon personally has been very | logical science enables me to arrive at : oeaieel ee't. jer, ent. 4 great, for a large number of guests the practical conclusion that happiness APPREP OA RAARRRAR RRPLPPPD in leather line--offered by cat- were entertained by him entirely at} is an art in which all could be past mas- his own expense. ters if we understood the elements at alogue houses. So come and The expenses of the native princes eur very door and meee how seatngs PRPPOPPLPILIL ILS PIII and chiefs vary greatly, from the $500,-| them to our special abilities and vary- see us and let us show you. 000 said to have been spent by the] ing exigencies of our environment.” THE WALTON TRUST co. =- Keep your money at home. Nizam of Hyderabad to the $50,000,000, for which sum the minor chiefs were Mrs, Valentin is widely known in Paris society and her receptions are OF BUTLER MISSOURI. We keep every thing that horse owners need, Double pe a but an indifferent dis- pry - wanes one ag oy — ‘ nit . $55,000 00, wagon harness fro 10 to Single harness $7.50 to play. en it is remembered that the] nym of “Genevieve Lanzy.” She wi urplus an 8 ‘ = < 19,848 16, een facial Pacing yyy gp a Poss of A styles number of these princes und chiefs] accompany her husband to the United Atesye Mm eered money yihorry $a ba lonnee on ae tto the rteel fork cow reaches nearly 100, the total expendi-| States, 8 * » Vecar an @ counties, So. and prices from the cheapes C) y eaiaaie aan and sole leather spring seat saddles. Lap robes, horse ture can easily be calculated. END OF PROFESSIONAL CRITICS Very Lowest Rates of Interest. blankets, dusters and fly nets, harness oll and soaps, limi- The governors of Madras and Bom- on five years time, allowing borrower to back part ments for man or beast, coach oils, axel grease, tents, vay and lieutenant governors of the Toe te each year if desired Even, land owner oN a Lesa wagon covers, men’s canvass leggings, trim buggy tops several provinces found it possible by | Pete Newapapere Adopt a Kew = should call and get our a before borrowi S| b new and repair old ones. Bring in yourold harness and vf ear : iu Handling the News of che f peemnderr apt Ih | iygetn Dhalragl ot y ig iny the exercise of careful European su- i Having on hand a large amount of idle money we are t We Sage the tar ont Retail Warnes and Beldier pervision to keep down the complete saegeere making low rates, We have a full and complete abstract Store in the Southwest and our harness are all made a oat of their camps to about $76 Are the golden days of the profes of title to every acre of land or town lot in Bates Count home. . Of the various events the procession siobat ey hd Hees ne rie cate isa roe se > “i 1 fant down to date, that we Keep ep with aun gion cacey a felt tanet BUGGIFS, SURRIES, ROAD ee ee ea a question now occupy ing Parisian play- Teascuabe peiees. re re PW oO re pues w : , . 7 : 4 . pirrss A es) goers, The Paris Matin has been $ weet ne tin if the native chiefs was the most ple-| £7" 11. ueititng ueray’ trom the old Interest Paid on Time Deposits. q ARLAND ey DULLEY, MO, uresque, while the natives appreciated | practice. It started by assigning re- ——DIRECTORS—— ceeesiiibainiaidiuad ——— most of all, porters like M, Gaston Leroux and lead- Wn. E, Walton, J. Everingham, J. R. Jenkivs, he ball in the Dewaniam was the] ey writers like M. Harduin to report John Deerwester, Ww, W. Trigg, T. C. Boulware, host gorgeous scene, as the investiture] first nights, Then it called upon a Frank M. Voris, O. H. Dutoher, C. R, Radforl, The oldest, safest, strongest Ma- vas the most stately, but the weari-| dramatist, M. Pierre Wolffe, to criti- py Levy, T. J. Wright, § yer Ss ‘cia teaticten, Het eeteeeet 1 | state entry Into Ded was very | eige his own play. 1 now publishes FRANK ALLEN, 8xcy. Wa. E, WALTON, Pres, . rkable as an example of organize A Malaria and take. A splendid tonic for all living ue Cure in malarial districts. al Droge a criticisim by M, Antoine of the latest production at that manager's house, This craving for a change is evi- — = denced also by the Figaro, which is in- i 7 OOOOOOOOOSOOOOOOOQUOOOOOO ion, It is wonderful that no accidents oe- urred during the long procession of lephants, carriages, horse and foot hrough the streets, 1,sooKilled and Wounded ia Battle. Caracas, July 24 —Order has been Lexington, Ky., July 24 —Clauc re established at Ciudad Bolivar. The following is a copy of an offi- | 19 years old, respectively, whose facer cial telegram sent by Gen. Gomez, indicate nothing of the criminal, were who captured Ciudad Bolivar, to | hanged here at 8 o’clock this morn President Castro, reporting the re- | ing for the murder of A. B. Chinn. cent events. On Sunday, July 19, the enemy | home of A. B. Chinn, a wealthy mer opened fire on our lines, After five chant, and an ex-Vonfederate soldier. hours’ deadly struggle, we occupied October 12, 1902, and demanded the the city. The result of our victory |old man’s money. Their voice- is as follows: “Inspecting the battlefield, we Asa Chinn, their son, ran to thedoo found more than fifteen hundred men | of his parents’ room, but one of the killed or wounded on both sides. “Our aide has to lament the death |ing. Asa Chinn also opened fire of Gen. Henrique Urdanetta. “On the side of the enemy, Gen. | sideof his bed. He was shot through Aurelie Valbueno was killed and many | the body. Asa Chinn was also shot other officers captured, including 28 and was lying upon the floor, using generals, among them Rolondo Guz: | his revolver as best he could. Whit- man, Vasques Farreras, McDonaldo | ney was wounded in the left knee and Luigi Salazar, 61 colonels and The elder Chinn tried to assist hi many officers of low rank. All the | son in the fight in the hallway and latter have been set at liberty. “We also captured 33,000 mausers, door, where he fell dead. The boys six field guns and 200,000 cartridges. | were captured a few days later near “The traitor, Ferraras, and other | here, but owing to rumors of lynch- companions escaped and are in hid- ing were removed to Louisville for ing in the city.” Old Age is No Bar to a Place. hington, July 18.—President neameailias issued an order elimi- A Splendid Remedy. nating old age as a disqualification for eligibility to appointment as la- borers in the government service The physical qualifications, however, must be met. A General Clay Will Contest? Richmond, Ky., July 24.—It is re body and effect some wonderful garded as certain that the will of General Cassius M. Clay will be con-| states: “I have used Ballard’sSnow | ond cruise in 1901. tested because of the bequest of $10,- 090 left in trust to Dora Brock, bis divorced child wife, although his chil- dren refuse to make any expression upon the subject. The funeral of General Clay will be to-morrow and in accordance with the provisions of the will, the body will be buried near his mother. The expense of the fun- eral is limited to $100 and a plain headstone is to mark the grave. The will will be offered for probate in the county court here August 3. The will was drawn May 12, 1900. General Clay was not declared of un- sound mind until this month. How- ever, it is not believed it will be diti- cult to prove that the sage of White hall had been insane for yeare and was lacking in testamentary capa- city. Beauty and Strength Many—nay, most—women, fal di er. He died a year ago. Are desirable. You arestrongand| Blackheads, pimples, greasy faces | and muddy complexions, which are vigorous, when your blood is 4 aa — amou aoe igeat their tood, and so be- | ly girls at a ce! in age, destroying i thin and 3 | heauty,-diefiguring-and making re- freshness and | pulsive, features which would other- Lord Curzon is to be warmly con- rratulated on the result of his hard york, SHURCHES TO RUN A STORE. Vaique Thank Offering of a Novelty Dealer of Shelton, N. Y.—Gives Profits for Two Weeks, As a thank-offering for the best vhristmas trade he ever had, Charles 3. DeForest, a novelty dealer of Shel- ton, will turn over his entire store to the local churches for two weeks, says a New York Times dispateh from Derby, Conn, There are six of these churches, the First Methodist, Congre- gational, Baptist, Chureh of Christ, Church of the Good Shepherd, First Unitarian, and St. Mary's Roman Cath- lie chureh, and they will take entire vharge of the store and divide the prof- its. A specially large stock of goods has been laid in for the purpose. Attractive young women from the churches will act as salesladies, and the pastor will be in charge of the cashie lesk, while little misses from the Sunday schools will open the doors for the patrons and conduet them to the various departments, The church- s expect to make more during the fortnight than they would in’ six Two Boys Hanged For Murder. terviewing playwrights on their opin- IWANT ion of what crities say about them, ‘The day of infallible experts is evident- Your old Iron and all Kinds of Junk Also am buying Wool, Hides, new and ly over, O’Brien and Earl Whitney, 18 anc old Foathers. Will give you the market price cided to send children of the municipal schools to witness a matinee perform- ance of “Theroigne de Mericourt” at the Theater Sarah Bernhardt, to give them an object lesson in the history The Paris municipal council has de- : Q delivered ot my yard in Butler. of the French revolution, O’Brien and Whitney entered the = Don’t Foreet I handle pure Anthracite, TOSCANELLI PAPERS DOUBTED. Arkansas Anthracite and Semi Anthracite and soft coal. Henry Vignaud Answers the Critics of Hie View of the Discovery of America, awakened Mrs. Chinn, whoscreamed J. M. SALLEE. Henry Viguaud, first secretary of the West Ohio Street. 31-3m United States embassy at Paris and vice president of the Aimerican'st ciety, of Paris, has just published his letters written to Sir Clements Mark- ham, presicent of the Royal Geograph- ical society, and Charles Raymond Boazley, in reply to their criticisms of his book, “Toscunelli and) Colum- bus.” These latest contributions to the in- tere g controversy wer ised by Mr, Vignaud’s assertion that the famous documents ascribed to Toscanelli, the learned Florentine astronomer, were fabricated. They clearly set forth ar- guments ag burglars saw him and began shoot PIONEER - DRUG - STORE SAM WALLS. Opposite Court House. The elder Chinn was aitting upon the got up from the bed and went to the ist the authenticity of Poscaneili’s alleged letter, and favor the st with the ordinary fuirs and so- y of the pilot who is said to have given Columbus the hint which led to the discovery of the western hemisphere. NEW RAILROAD LAMP. PARI IAEHERDEZEABABHO safe keeping. O’Brien’s home was in TN FOURTEEN FEET OF ICE. Memphis. Earl Whitney has rele- tives in Nashville. The Arctic Steamer Yermak Able to Plow Its Way Through Thick Floes in the North. English Managers Examine the Mer- its of Invendion of Young Hew- itt and Will Give Ita Trial, West Side Square, BUTLER, MO. Admiral Makarov, in an interesting paper before the Russian Imperial Ge- ographical society, at St. Petersburg, has summed up the results attained by him in polar navigation on the Yer mak. His attempt in 1899 showed the hull was too weak to bear the pressure of the ice pack heaped up by its own mo- tion. After strengthening and reshap- ing the bows, the Yermak made its see- BRAS SEB 4 ORAS EBS PEED EDEM® EME Neuralgic pains, rheumatism, lum- bago and sciatic pains yield to the { penetrating influence of Ballard’e Snow Liniment. It penetrates tothe nerves and bone, and being absorbed into the blood, its healing properties are conveyed to every part of the ote Oey Sane a er Cr Ue ce or er ar er Ser eS George Westinghouse entertained at London the gther lay all the big man- sh railway com- Died While 100 Looked Qn. Gen. Cassius M. Clay Dies Without anies at his premises onthe Strand. He did this to introduce a youthful sell al ‘ z Guthrie. Ok., July 25 —Robert | and clever young American electrician, x Bland, a lineman employed by the Pioneer Telephone company, was | “lectrocised in midair here Thursday. | 1 ‘ , While working on a telephone pole “i ock thiscvening at hishome, White about twenty-five feet above the lf et g ound, Bland touched a live electric | . The physician who had been attend- wire. He fell, but his foot caught in | “8 the aged “sage of Whitehall” the wires and held him till he was he ue court adjudged him of un- burned to death in sight of more than eounu mind notified Gen. Clay's ahundred people in the street. He children today that their father had was 30 years old and had been em- only a few hours tolive. All thechild- ployed here only a few days. His)" except one drove to Whitehall parents live near San Antonio, Tex. and, forcing their way past the Gen- ———— eral’s guards, entered their father’s room. To Prison With the Boodlers, This was the first time any of the Clinton, Mo., July 25.—The Rev. | children had been in the mansion, or Pro L. Landreth, editor of the Nash- | had seen their father for years, and ville Cumberland Presbyterian, | it was only because the old man’s touched on Missouri politics in a lec-| firearms had been removed from his ture at the Chautauqua to-day, say- | room that they dared toenter today ing that honesty is the best policy. | as Gen. Clay had threatened to kill “Tf you have any bad men send them | any one who entered without his per- to the penitentiary, not the legisla-| mission. ture,” he said. “When a mansends| Gen. Clay did not realize his danger- boodlers to the penitentiary, send | ous condition and lapsed into un- that man to a place where he can | consciougness without reconciliation send more boodlers to the peniten-| with his children, who had been forc- tiary.” i ie coat ed to remain away from him for years Reconciliation inventor and financier, Peter Cooper Hewitt. the son of Abram 8. Hewitt, and to Gemonstrate the benefits of young Hew itt’s clever invention of the mereury vapor lamp. a wonderful con- trivance for lighting up tunuels and all subterr: in pass The British railwayn gers were greatly interested in Mr. Hewitt's lamp. It will be tried soon on several of the roads at London. Lexington, Ky., July 22.—Cassins cures. Mr. D. F. Moore, Agent Illi- Mc Clay died’ at: ten mihntes after 9 nois Central Railway, Milan, Tenn, Liniment for rheumatism, backache ete.,in my family. It is a splendid remedy. We could not do without it.” 25c, 50c and $1.00 at H. L, Tucker’s Drug Store. In two voyages between Nova Zem- bla and Franz Josef Land she easily disposed of ice 14 feet thick until she was finally hemmed in and delayed three weeks off the former island on account of the immense masses of ice 66 feet high driven up by unusually per- sistent southern winds. Women Drowned inan Attempt to Save Children. Seattle, Wash., July 23.—Mrs. Ella Smith of Homa, her {two little daughters and Mrs. Rena Bradford of Seattle were drowned in the Hood canal at the foot of the Olympic mountains, The children got out of their dep .h, their mother went to the rescue, followed by Mrs. Bradford, who plunged into the water and made a heroic effort to save the drowning women and children. Her strength proved unequal to the task and all four were drowned. . Repulsive Features, ELECTRIC SYSTEMS TESTED. REMARRIES TRUANT HUSBAND. Illinois Wenih Deserted Thirty Years Ago, Divorced, Widowed and Now a Bride Again. English Railroada Making Experi- menta with the Westinghouse Motive Power. . The Westinghouse Electric company is making an effort to increase the interest of English railroads in elec- trie traction. The company expects to secure large contracts shortly, es- pecially from the Great Northern anc Great Eastern and the two southern lines. For some time the Great Northern has been conducting experiments at the Westinghouse works at Manches- ter, and the Great Eastern has been testing the electric system in a similar manner near London. John Sawrey, of Wheeling, Mo., and Mrs. Robert Thompson, of Shobonier, lil., were married the other night at the home of the bride. Thirty years ago Sawrey left Carlyle, Ii, at a time when he was city mar- shal. He left his wife and one child, ‘a boy, behind. Not a word was heard of him until a few days ago, when he returned. In the meantime his wife had obtained a divorce and married Robert Thompson, a prosperous farm- American Astronomers Enterprising. Within 25 years American astrono- mers have won as many annual medals of the Royal Asironomical society of Englund as astronomers of all other countries, except England, combined. Sawrey went to the home of the wid- ow Thompson, and she recognized him instantly. He proposed marriage, but _she refused at first. A reconciliation followed, and the wedding was the se- 1. Their ages are 63 and 60 years wise appear attractive and refined,| 7° + | indicate that the liver ie out of order. | T’*Pectvely. An occasional dose of Herbine will Inaalted the Police, cleanse the bowels, regulate the liver} = For uttering a strong expression of and eo establish a clear, disapproval while quarreling with i constable at Vienna a nobleman hat been fined for insulting the police. Two More Dead of Lockjaw. because he believed they wanted to Liberty, Lo. July 17.—William | Kill him to get possession of his prop- Bland, a 10-year old boy, died at | ty. eetin a Platteburg yesterday of lockjaw, Those Prying Newspapers. ing from a burn on the band Dr, Lyman Abbott rather likes the] Joly 4 by a blank cartridge. A son cas, newspapers. Evidently, says the Chi- of C. R. Wonison of Exce! jorSprings | Beare tle x cago Record-Herald, the good doctor before fi same hasn't been doing anything that he is — ne tiga sae oe — afraid to have found out. Always have money to loan. |

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