The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, October 1, 1903, Page 6

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oot pene eee 1871 107 Great Confagration of Repro- duced on Occasion of the City’s Centennial Anniversary. INDIAN SHOW AT LINCOLN PARK, Biz Tribes of Red Men Under Chief Poka- gon, Whose Father Ruled Over the City ou the Lakes in 1505. Are Present to Add Interest to the Affair ~ Celebration | George-Lee C SENSATIONAL Suif, Senator W. J. Stone Seeks to Recover 810, QU0 from G. L. Chrisman on an Old iansas City Times Deal. —Alleging deceived, Kansas City, Mo., he malic J. Stone, United States sen- im Missouri, has brought suit ept iously that William was ator I ia the circuit man, presiding judge oi the county court, president of the cid Kansas City Times company. The | deception took place, according to Sen- ator Stone, in 1890 when Judge Chris- man and others bought the Times and induced Mr. Stone, then a candidate for senatorial honors, to subscribe for | stock in the newly organized company. LITTLE INTEREST TAKEN. Monument to Composer Wagner Will Be Unveiled October 1, But the Wagner j Family Will Rema Away. Berlin, Sept. 2 It is uneertain whether Emperor William will be pres- ent at the unveiling of the Wagner monument October 1. The managing nittee supposes that he will and is daily driling a squadron of trumpet- ers to salute the emperor. The musi¢ during the week's celebration will be less brilliant than the promoters .ex- | pected, the engagements of most of the German artists having prevented their acceptance of the invitations sent to them, and the antagonisms of the committe with others of the German | K. 0, Pittsburg & Galf Time Table Arrival and departure Of trains as w; City dail as City dally Rxprese During Convalescence Recovery is hastened, health restored and vitality renewed by the use of Aili Niti ulune Bemembertbisis the a1 tween Kansas City, Mo. etree Missouri Pacific Railway Will Continue Six Days. wORTE So. 30 Rt. Lents mall. No. 2 Kaneas City express. 24 St Lout ioe Local Freight Rt. Louis Joplin (limitted) mail — m3 in x Faneee & Joplin expr. Chicago, Sept. —The celebration The chief grievance of the senator is, | musical world have caused many re- of Chicago's centennial anniversary | that he was told, when he subscribed | fusals to attenc the musical congress. began Saturday and will continue six |!0F his stock, Judge Chrisman, A. A. | Besides, the committee, to please the days, the exercises to end with a civic | Lesueur and H,. J. Groves were to con- | Wagner family, announced its inten- mass meeting at the Auditorium at, trol the paper, but that after he (the | tion to invite a number of composers which the mayors of several of the | S@™ator) had parted with his money, | and critics, but the Wagner family is largest cities in the country will be! he discovered that the Metropoiltan | not coming, after all, according to the heard. The programme prepared by | Street Railway company, the Missouri | latest report from Bayreuth. the executive committee contains spe-| & Kansas Telephone company, the cial features for each day and a great Kansas City Stock Yards company and number of visitors is anticipated. The | the Burlington railway company owned Indian show at Lincoln park, where he majority of the stock and controlled six tribes of Indians live as their an-| ‘he paper's policy. cestors lived, is the center of great interest, the most prominent feature being the presence among the rep- resentatives of the six tribes of Charles Pokagon, descendant of Chief Pokagon, who once ruled over Chicago. The spectacular event of the opening pro- gramme came Saturday night when tons of fire was burned on 28 corners within the elevated loop, typifying the burning of the city in 1871. Nine historic tablets were put in place during the afternoon, the cere- monies being held in the public library building, Mayor Harrison delivering the addres of welcome in behalf of \ the city. The streets present a gala ® day appearance, public buildings and business houses being elaborately dec- All druggists sell it. Prepared by the Anheuser-Busch Brewing Ass’n St. Louis, U. 8. A + m Penal Colony for Negroes, Fort Worth, Tex., Sept. 27.—Con- gressman John H. Stevens goes to con- gress with two measures to bring up in the house, one to provide a penal colony in the Philippines for the crimi- nal class of negroes and the other to induce congress to open for settlement the 280,000-acre tract of land in Co- manche county, along the Red river, said to be the richest land in the In- dian territory, and which was reserved by the government for pasturage when the country was opened in 1901, C. Va Read! Read! Read! Smith Medteal Co, St, Louie, Mo., Sept. 15:h, 1903. Gentlemen :— I write tell you of the good results Farmers’ Daughters Make the| Millionare’s peg Asphyxiates Beet Wives. San Francisco, Cal. Sept 11.—Miee New Haven, Conn., Sept. 26.—That | Isabella Duncan Clark, daughter of “farmere’ daughters make the best | thelate Wm. Squire Clark, San Jose wives” was one of timely remarks millionare, commited euicide in her] of my . apartments at the McNutt hospital made by Governor Abriam Chamber aa to-day. On atool by time lain at the Orange town fair, which | ahe placed a small gas stove, from pleased not only several hundred! which the steadily escaping gas women, but double that number of [caused death. There is no doubt eatin, thedeed had been planned deliberately se The dead woman was one of the The State's executive told hishear- | four handsome Clark sisters, well ers that he knew whereof! he spoke. | known in this city and San Jose, and He said he was once a farmer’s boy | was 32 years of age. Miss Clark suf- and “had dug potatoes, mowed hay fered frequent spells of melancholia — done all the chores of afarm fs pea belore attempted sui- CONVICTS SEEK REVENGE. BEALE AM Plan Hatched in the Nebraska Peniten- tlary to Kidnap the Bight-Year-Old Daughter of Gov. Mickey. Lincoln, Neb., Sept. 27.—An attempt was made last night to kidnap the eight-year-old daughter of Gov. Mickey, While four of the governor's children were playing in front of the mansion au unknown man came along and tried to carry the oldest girl away. The other ebildren clung to his clothes and screamed, The .man was so badly frightened when he saw neighbors coming that he dropped the child and rap, Gov, Mickey says that the warden of 2 3 pa Want Trial Docket Relieved, Ardmore, I. T., Sept 27.—Attorneys of the leading towns of the Chickasaw nation met at Ardmore and prepared a petition to congress urging another yudge in the Southern district to assist Judge Townsend, because of the vast amount of business, It was also the sense of the attorneys that probate els EM crated with Gage and bunting, and omy nai ayes gig sc ge courts be established in the district} The Governor is generally believed A Woman’s Complexion. - : many bearing pictorial reproductions}. nad been prophesied by convicts, | With the power to try misdemeanors |¢4 have aspirations to succeed him-| Itis rank foolishness to attempt|1 havehad Kiduey trouble four years of old Fort Dearborn and other historic Oe ae ee ics alle tea | te civil business where the amount alt hart Heis a banker in | to remove sallowness or greasiness tried 3 doctors and several patent tuildines One convict said some time ago thal] jy volved is less than $500. self another term. ¢ 1s a banker In medicines, with little relief uutil ad- ofthe skin by the use of cosmetics, or “local treatment, as advocated by the ‘beauty doctors.” The only safe such a plan had been formed as a way of geiting revenge upon the governor for his refusal to interfere when Wil- business iu Meriden. Thirty-one aldermen and city offi- elals of Cleveland arrived to take part vised by Mr. N.C Herroutotry your Kiduey Cure and two bottles did Will Not Take Seaboard Line. New York, Sept. 27.—Maps recently in the celebration, They " . R more good than all other treatment, pocPigieaRimip Ae aac te 1 was hanged last summer} made autho the Rock Island- Do You Want to Yawn? and sure way that a woman canim-|1 think Smith's Sure Kidney Cure dermen to their hotel and 1s r. A convict who had been | Frisco-Seaboard system must be re- prove her complexion is by purifying |the best of all. It will do all and Feel cold shiverings, aching in the bones, lack of energy. heagache, sn! great depression? These symptoms may be followed by violent headache, high fever, extreme nervousness, & condition known as malaria, Her- bine cures it. Take it before the dis- wore than you clatm for it, It re- heved me of indigestion or stomach tronbvie, I am thankful, Your very truly, C, A. Harpxr, J. P. Price 50 cents and $1.00, For sale by all Drnggicts, andenriching the blood, which can only be accomplished by keeping the liver healthy and active. The liver is the eeat of disease and blood pol |; lution. Green’s August flower acte directly on the liver, cleanses and en- riches the blood, purifies the com- plexion, It also cures constipation, drafted. Neither the Frisco nor the Rock Island railroad will take the Seaboard Air Line railway, It is said d interests objected to Presi- dent Yoakum’s deal and as a result Yoakum y resign from the Rock Is- land-Frisco directorate, plot says a convict soon to be ed had been assigned to kidnap one of the children to “teach the gov- ernor a lesson.” in ecarria ticipating in the dedicatory exerc es about the city betore par- Rock Islar CHARGED WITH BIG_FRAUD. AMERICANS MISTREATED. Ex-Collector of Wright County, Mo. and rs Used the United § ys Malis to Defraud, The Nashville is n Ordered to Biue- St. Louis, Sept. 27.—N. F. Nail and ee ee be ee oye Pg ab eter abe pee Seated of [ease gets a fair hold, though it will biliousnees, nervousness, and induces ae Most Liberal Offer. 4 X M. B , charged with using the pint Ma ag Mer oP el work a cure in any etage. J. A, refreshing sleep, A single bottle of| All our farmer readers should take 36 caskets, containing jubilee presents that were given to the late Queen Vic- toria of England, arrived yesterday at the office of the surveyor of the port. Permission was granted by King Ed- rd VIL. to allow them to be exhib- ied at the St. Louis world’s fair, The eifts are valued at $50,000, eer August Flower bas been known to cure the most pronouncing and dis tressing cases of dyspepsia and in digestion. New trial eize bottle, 25 cents; regular size, 75 cents At all druggists. G.G. Green, Woodbury. New Jers are in the custody of ed States Marshal William Morsey was brought trom Norwood ed on his farm near Washington, Sept. 27,.—Additional information obtained at the state de- artmeat about the trouble near blue- aragua, is to the effect thai f American citizens have ment on the istar irews, 40 miles from Biueiieids, i that the local authorities failed to aXord them protection or r s. The matter was reported to t pariment by Edwin W. American agent at Bluefie , and his suggestion the Nasiville has been ordered from Pensacola to St. An- drews, The state department offi say they do not anticipate serious rouble but the evident inability of the local authorities or their unwilling- ness to maintain order makes the pres- advantage of the unprecedented club- bing offer wa this year make, which includes with this paper the Live Hopkins, Manchester, Kan., writes: “T have used your great medicine, Herbine, for several years, There is nothing better for malaria, chills and fever, headache, biliousness, and fora blood:puritying tonic, there is nothing as good.” S0c at H. L Tucker's Drug Store. Nail ¥ Raney was arrest Stock Indicator, its Special Farmers’ Institute editions and The Poultry Farmer. These three publications are the bestof their class and should be in every farm home. To them we add, for local, county and general hews, our own paper, and make the price of the four one year only $1.25. Never before was eo much superior reading matter offered for so small an amount of money. The three papers named, which we club with our own, are well known throughaut the west, and commend themselves to the reader’s favorable attention upon mere mention. The Live 8tock " Hartville. It is ¢ a7 Raney are met Le has been The Best is the Cheapest} Not how cheap but how good !r the question. The Twice-a Week Republic is not as cheap as some so-called newspa | pers, but it is ascheap asitis possibl to sell a first-class newspaper. Ih prints all the news that is wort) printing. If you read {t all the year large wholesale Kansas City and C formerly Banker and 88,000 Missing, Pittsburg, Pa., Sept. 27.—The dis- ippearance of S. Kalman, proprietor oi a private bank at Schoenviile, pat- ionized by Slavs and Croatians, caused ereat excitement among the foreigners. Four informations charging embezzle- ment have been entered against him. it is alleged that the total deposits were about $8,000. the co and had a good commercial It is claimed that upon the th of his reputation he would order goods from different firms, and, receiving them, would distribute them among members of the gang, who would take the booty to other cities and dispose of Held Prisoner in Factory. New York, September 26.—Ernest C. Webb, who ten years ago Was one of the most successful patent lawyers in the city, was arraigned in the Gates avenuecourt, Brooklyn, to-day en Will “Blow” Herself. PASSENGERS IN A PANIC. ence of an American warship desir- Hetty Indicator is the great agricultural me able. New York, Sept. 27.—Mrs. Hetty }on a technical charge of abandon. | Tound you are posted on all the im | 14 live atock oabee pelt Airy The At Sea the St. Louis Met with an Accident eunnaenen Green is going into society. The rich- | mont, preferred by his wile. portant and interesting affairs ofth: | Poultry Farmer is the most practical and Attempt Was Made to Send est woman in America, seeking new a Wireless . has turnesl her eyes , and is even now ne- villa on Bellevue DEFY THE CIVIL COURTS. world. It is the best and most reli — able newspaper that money an« brainscan produce—and those shoul be the distinguishing traits ofa news paper that is designed to bo read_b» all members of the family. Subscription price, $layear. Any newsdealer newspaper or postmaste? will receive your subscription or yor may mail it direct to Tae REPUBLIC, St. Louis. Mo i. C. BOULWARE, Physician anc e Surgeon. Office nortnside square Butler,Mo. Diseasesof womenand chi DR- J. M. CHRISTY; Diseases of women and Children s Specialty. Office The Over Butler Cash Depart- ment Store, Butler, Mo. Office Telephone 20, House Telephonel0, HARRIET.FREDERICK, © OSTEOPATHIST, All classes of diseases successfully treated. Consultation andexamina tion free. Office over Postoffice Butler, Mo. DR, J. T. HOLL DENTIST. Gatrance, same thatlead Lf "1 atudio.north side eqauare Rae ne . B. F. JETER, coultry paper for the farmer, while the Special Farmers’ Institute Edi- tions are the most practical publica- tions for the promotion of good ‘arming ever published. Take ad- vantage of this great offer, as it will hold good for a short time only. samples of these papers may be ex- unined by calling at this office. 7-6m |TABLER’S PILE iBUCK EYE OINTMENT URES NOTHING BUT PLES, A SURE and CERTAIN CURE } known for 15 years as the {BEST REMEDY for PILES. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. — But back of this story was a start- ling story of the imprisonment and | sequestration of the man from his | family in a factory at No. 722 East Eleventh street, New York, where, it is alleged, he had been fed on whis- key and cocaine until he was a total physical wreck, by Julius Froebler, che owner of the factory, in order that he might have him ready to defend a patent suit in which Mr. Froebler’s business and fortune are involved. State Militia In Cripple Creek District Ar- reat Another Union Man and Pat Him in the “Ball Pen.” New York, Sept. -William Gilles- pie Wylie, of New Orleans, f the supreme court of Louis i: 72 years, died of pneumonia on th steamer St. Louis about midnight. Judge Wylie was ill when he boarded the steamer, which arrived here from Southampton. The St. Louis stopped one of her engines early Tuesday and after several hours started the engine again, going at her usual speed. One of the passengers attempted to send a story ashore by wireless telegraphy, saying that the engines broke down and that a panic occurred among the passengers. The message was held up by the ship’s censors, The officers de- nied that there was a panic. They said the journals were overheated, which caused the delay. 27.—Wil- | enterta Cripple Creek, Col., Sept. -iam Dedsworth, president of union No. 32 was arrested at his home in Goldfield by the military and thrown in the “bull pen.” He asked the sol- diers with what crime he was charged, but they refused to assign any reason tor taking him into custody. Dods- worth was but recently elected presi- dent of the Victor union. He is a large property owner in the town of Goldfield. It is said that the military aeard that Dodsworth was expressing strong opinions against their presence in the district, and for this reason it was deemed fit to place him in the “bull pen.” Plans for the importation of 1,200 strike breakers are said to have been made by the mine owners’ asso- ciation. in society's elect. Amateur Detective Kitled. Rego, Ind., Sept. 27.—Charles Mar- shall is dead here from the effects of injuries sustained in an assault al- leged to have been committed by H. C. Hite who, according to Marshall's story, was a counterfeiter. Marshall claimed to be an amateur detective and was attempting to arrest Hite. No Protectorate for Morocen, London, Sept. 27.—The Bitirsh for- eign office, in denying the statement of the Paris correspondent of the Daily Mail that Great Britain and Spain had egreed to the establishment of a French protectorate over Morocco, characterizes the story as “groundless nonsense.” MRS. DAVIS NO BETTER. Physicians at Her Bedside Say Crisis Has Not Been Reached, But Her Con- dition Is Critical. Buffalo, N. Y., Sept. 27.—Mrs. Jeffer- son Davis is worse, her condition being considered critical. The doctors say, however, that the crisis has not been reached and should she get relief she may recover. Several relatives and friends have arrived and are at her bedside. Earope’s First “Anti-Jag” Cure. Berlin, Sept. 27.—The city of Dresden will open on October 1 the first insti- tution for the cure of drunkenness on the continent. Patients must be exam- ined as to their sanity and be diagnosed as curattve, and must voluntarily sub- mit to a regimen of healthful living such as farmwork. They will have good, moral surroundings and must pay 45 cents a day. Patients may stop three years in the institution. ia Boycotting Unpopnuiar in Alabama. Birmingham, Ala., Sept. 27.—The lower house of the Alabama legislature adopted by a vote of 60 to 32 an anti- boycott bill. The bill punishes boy- cotts and blacklists as conspiracy and provides action in damages against those who formulate or circulate them. [Quick and 'Pieasant ) FRISCO Excellent Service ~ Drivers of Delivery ‘Wagons Strike, Kansas City, Mo., Sept. 27.—About 30 delivery wagons employed by the Emery, Bird, Thayer Dry Goods com- pany quit work after refusing to accept a compromise offered by the company. Fifteen or 20 bundle boys also struck 117 Miles for Electric Car. Berlin, Sept. 27.—A high speed triai over the Zossen experimental electric railroad Saturday resulted in attain- ing a speed at the rate of over 117 miles per hour, Every part of the 100- To Superintend Kansas Exhibit. Lawrence, Kan., Sept. 27.—Chancel- lor Frank Strong, of the Kansas uni- versity, has appointed John McDonald, ton car was intact and the roadbed | of Topeka, to prepare the Kansas in sympathy with their drivers, Attorney at Law and Justice, to poate In ; was not affected. The fact that the | school exhibit at the world’s fair. Joint Holders of the Record. Office over H. H. Nichols, Miss ri dl machinery and roadbed were not im- | McDonald’s assistants will be Super-| New York, Sept. 27.—Major Delmar | Cheeks and bright eyes, the Kast side square, Butler, Mo. ouri, paired gives every hope of attaining | intendent Davidson, of the Topeka |trotted a mile against time this after- wrinkles of taken . Arkansas, speed at the rate of 125 miles per hour. | schools; Vice President Hill, of the /noon in two minutes flat, equaling the T state normal and Prof. Dyer, of To-|record of Lou Dillon. Major Delmar 6O YEARS’ ennessee, Women Control Kansas Schools. peka. and Lou Dillon are the only horses that EXPERIENCE Alabama, Topeka, Kan., Sept. 27.—The women of Kansas have won their greatest po- litical victory. Reports are reaching the office of the state superintendent of public instruction in the form of returns from the school district elec- ver trotted in this time, and are joint holders of the world’s record. Policeman Beaten with His Own Club. Chicago, Sept. 27.—Patrolman Den- nis Fitzgerald was knocked down and beaten with his own club and then shot twice with his own revolver by two negroes whom he had stopped. Later John Johnson and Louis Pilsen were i ; Mississippi, Florida | And the Southeast, and to Kansas, Oklahoma, Indian Territory, Texas - Gen. Ola‘s Insargent Band Surrenders, Manila, Sept. 27.—Gen. Ola, leader of the band of insurrectos which has been creating considerable trouble in the province of Albay, Luzon, has sur- rendered to the American troops with 28 officers and men of his command.

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