The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, November 5, 1903, Page 13

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Negre Woman Heads Bank. Unearthed a Jar of Buried Geld~ | © SENTENCED TO A BATH. d, Va., Nov. 7.—Maggie L. SHIPS TO CARRY OWN ELS... Fort. Worth, Tex., Nov. 5—W. L. Chinese tumate of Denver, Gol, Jail American War Veescia May Have oa Tepresentative colored wo- | Taylor, a merchant, tells astory of "4 Beltat . ee —— i president of the St. Luke| a stone jar containing $8000 in gold —— a 8 bank, which began business | on the old Hill place, one mile west Considerable trouble was aroused at z dinde ase _ bere this SS . Ae - | of Sprit wo, by parties unk the county jail at Denver a few days every ship in the mary will have a were ning Bacay weg eet Sentay aight r —"s ago when Tong Fuyi, a Chinese inmate, model of herself en board. It is known 1 ‘i was ordered by the court to take a &% & supplementary plam or skeleton & began to crowd in, bringing from $1| or years there has been a tradi- bath. Most of the sdjourners there,| model. ‘The ships of the German navy » to many hundreds, and before the | tion that the brother of the Hill girls’ when outside, are not sticklers for have them. At present even officers time came for clusing the sum aggre- | four of whom were hanged for har-! cleanliness, but the jurisdiction of the , Sometimes have no clear conception of gated $75.000. The bank has a/ boring horsethievesmany Years ago, | *8Agaroo court ts necessarily limited. | the construction of the hidden parts of <> __ on P and so they allow no opportunity to es-| the vessels. The only ship that now \ capital of $50,000. came to the place while in feeble cape of caeartion eg a has a skeleton -of herself aboard is the " health, and before dying, buried a| One of the mont important dominions | turret ship Monterey, commarded by ; Shops the Cold and Works off the/ stone jar containing this treasure,| over which it holds sway is the jail} Commander W. H. Beebler, who was 2 Cold. which, according to the story,| bathroom. Every inmate must take a| Naval attache at Berlin for several y ama a — Sz ligrimage to its cleansing waters twice| years. He is perhaps best known to the & week. Now Tong Fuyi had seldom) public by the fact that the Kaiser used to experienced the polluting touch of| call him “Bill.” water. His ancestors had warned him| Beehler became imbued with the Gon against {t, and from his earliest recol-} Man ideas while he was at Berlin, and lections he had daily prayed to his} When he was sent tothe a eet to Shinto god that he might never be de-| Command the Monterey be could not filed by it. rest until he had provided his craft The kangaroo court, however did not} With a skeleton model. He hired Chi- seem to grasp the force of his religious] nese carpenters, and for two months arguments, and ordered that he be/ they toiled fashioning a model of the ducked, It took four deputy sheriffs} Monterey to a scale of a e@uarter of an of the court to strip Fuy! and drop him| Inch to the foot. The moe =! can be tak- into the tub. Fuyi called loudly for] en apart, and the men on the the ald of all the gods in the Shinto cal-| Monterey can look under the boilers at endar. Both Buddha and Confucius de-| any time instead of havime to wait un- serted him in this hour of need and| til the fires are drawn. This fact alone down under the water he went. He] has saved more than the cost of the sprayed the entire south wing of the| model, Wilding and gave his tormentors as By means of the toy ship the warrant thorough a soaking as he got himself,| machinists were able to: They soon had all the wetting they| set of boilers of a differe cared for and left him to sink or swim] put In. Otherwise the qnesti as best he could. Once ou.’of the tub,| have had to be referred to Puy! disregarded all advice to use a] of steam engineering in t towel, but climbed into his clothes with] month would have been | all haste and crawlod off into a corner] has been found to be of inval to dry. At In training the men for ? t/-anne nl cles, e Chir ORIENTAL LUMBER TRADE BIG. | (r", Cmersencies. Th ters charged only $110 for the work, ROUGH DANCES MUST GO. Laxative Bromo-Quinine Tablet: cure a cold in oneday. No cure, no pay. Price 25 cents. amounted to $8000 in gold. He left no clew to thie piace where the money was hidden, and for years ineffectual search has been made for the treas ure by various parties. Colorado Bank Fails. Vietor, Colo., Nov. 7.—The First se are spe National bank of Victor, controlled 6G CP. _gthe Wood's Investment company, Me CTCL a wealthy corporation, owning} nis signature is on every bOx of the gemuins » many valuable mines here, closed its} Laxative Bromo-Quinine Taviee * doors yesterday afternoon. Jamos| ** remedy the! cvren » colt tm ome day B. Lazear has been appointed receiv- | er. The capital of the bank is $50,- To Fight the Tobacco Trust. » 000 and the deposits last September Chicago, Nov. 7.—The independent were over $300,000, elgar dealers of the country have adopted a plan to secure $200,000 a To Care a Cold in One Day. year with which to fight the trust Take Laxative Bromo Quinine} This plan will remain in effect until Tablets. All druggists refund the| the j a : y it it fuile to cure E. W. he independent dealers have accom plished some results, according to ahd e's ot coe ben, the statement last pight of M. W Diffley, chairman of the executive Another Kentucky Feud. committee of the board of directars Jackson, Ky., Nov. 7—Samuel| of the Cigar Dealers’ Assvci-tion of an 18-year-old boy, lastnight | America, The money will be raised stabbed Jacob Spencer to death at | by selling stamps to the dealers to be ) Middlefork, six miles west of this city, | Placed on all goods sold. 4. Young Gross committed the deed in Say » revenge for the death of his father, Quits Ministry For Work, ” Curtis Gross, who was called out of Pittsburg, Pa., Nov. 2.—The Rev. _ bed by Spencer the night before and| J. 4. Johnson has resigned from the shot dead without a word. An old} Mothodiat Protestant church on the grndge lies back of the double trag- | south side, because he said the minis- edy. try made no provision fora man or MILLIONAIRES POOR STOMACH | bs family tn old age. He said it was & man’s firat duty to provide for AE jah chang age mg of ee himeelf and his family, and heisseek- H onaire is often para in > public prints ae a horrible example tag poeltion Wileh “pays more }} of evils attendant on the possession | Money. * of great wealth. But millionnires are 720 the only ones who are afflicted bad stomachs. The proportion is far greater among the toilers, Dys pepsia and indigestion are rampant among these people, and they suffer for woree tortures than the million. aire unless they avail themselves ofa standard medicine like Green’s Au- gd Flower, which has been a favor houeehold panty for all stomach troubles for over thirty five years Always fresh. a Order of Publication, STATE OF MISSOURI, County of Bates, uf, va, Nannie Davis Shelby, Samuel Shelvy SP Allen John B Henderson: detendants, Civil action for delinquent taxes, Commerce Chance of Coast's Interests, “Yale Glides” and “Harvard Dips” Are Held Up to Scora by Pretessors of the Terpsichoreas Art. Missouri, in vacation and tiles her The lumber markets of the orient and the share which the United States is like- ly to haveinsupplying them, isthe subject Just now of some attention by the depart- ment of commerce and labor, through its bureau of statistics. The bureau recently received and published statements of consuls {n the orient, whieh announced the arrival of the first cargo of lumber in the Chinese market from Vladivo- stock, by a Ruesian vessel. This fact opens the question of future competition for the orlental market between the American lumber Interests on the Pacific coast, on the one hand, and thoee of the Russians {n Siberia on the Yalu river, on the other, The American industry of the Pacific coast has the advantage of organization on a large scale, and of mechanical equip- ment. This {s evidenced by the rate of Football tactics of the ballroom floor must stop. No more “Yale glides” or “Harvard dips” or distorted attempts to tread a measure tn two-four time when the music calls for three beats in the bar. Such ts the ultfmatem of the American Society of Profeseors of Dane- ing. War has been deelare¢ by the pro fessors_on what they catt the tnvaston of their special field by fe students, Dancing a two-step to waltz time and the grotesque positions assumed br the dancers are the evils attributed to the college fads that have ritlated the pub- lle taste, “Some of these students.” said a prominent professor, “invent a series annual production. Unofficial estimates OF BISUAR contortions of football tacthos } ‘ “Yale glid th put the annual cut of lumber and shingles y~dhieed hel Maui ihe skcae of the Pacific states at 4.600,000,000 feet. ination with a college name to tt. The It 1s calculated that, at this rate, the for- public thinks it fs all right because the ee Pacific coast will be exhausted college mer do tt. Now we want to gg he lumbermen have been rap-| 8t0P all this and bring dancing back to idly enlarging their area and volume of — Re S ae commercta! distribution, both tn the for- beauty of maven ia geeks The foot. elgn and domestic markets. According ball rush type of dancing ts a isgrace. to figures gathered by the bureau of sta- “The majority ‘of penhe per eects tistics, the redwood shipments from up- to dance the two-step A cane music.” 2 : ma Me es =a nh aang in 1902 amownted to 260, added Prof. Duenzeg. “This is not right. Farther forth on the coast the trade The two-step is easier to teach. as it is in lumber has been expanding with cor- mate ta ane balk ene nthe Ph responding strides. Shipments by water] ™USI¢ is . shisha alone at Seattle were 564,472,801 fect of] PELT DEATH WAS COMING. lien of the 3 taxes of the y 1900, 10, 1901, am ing In the egate to the sum of towether with erest, costs, commiasion: fees upon the following described tricts of situated in Bates county, Missouri. te-wit: 160 acres southeast quarter of section 7 nt in 32, and that unicas the fendant be and appear at the next Auctioneer. I want to cry your sales. Give me atrial. Satisfaction or no charges. Best of references furnished on or E, tf day thereof p ber dovry rendered according to the pr tai sold to satisfy the aa e said that a copy hereof be pub! cation. Call on or address, Rossins, Amorett, Mo. Prohibits Slave Hunting. record. Manila, Nov. 7.—Slave bunting has been prohibited in the Philippines August Flower rouses the torpid | 48 @ result of the confirmation by liver, thus creating appetite and in-| the Philippine commission of the anti- suring perfect digestion. It tones} | 1 d by the legislati and ritallzee the entire system and cee te eee “ey cil of the Moro provinces UOcto- } makes life worth living, no matter | °°U"° por what your station. rial bottles, | ber 5. Vessels engaged in the elave 250; regular size, 75c. trade are to be confiscated. the 26th day of Sentomber, 1903 48-4t JL A PAL BLO ON, Cirentt Clerk Order of Publication, W Done, administrator. Order of Publication, of the estate of G M W an decea: gente te the court his petiti of said deceased as will pay and satisfy the re- maining debts due by said estate, and yet unpaid for want of sufficient ‘assets accompanied by the accounts, lists and inven- vories as required by law; on examination whereof it is ordered, that all persona interest- ed in the estate of said deceased, be notified that application as aforesaid has been made, and unless the contrary be shown on or before the first day of the next term of this court to be held on the second Monday of November, 193, an order will be made for the sale of the whcle, or so much of the real estate of said de- ,,. | deased as will be sufficient for the payment of >| said debts and it is further order- ed that this notice be published in some news- paper in Bates county, Missouri, for four weeks before the next term of this court, and that a copy of this notice be served on each of the heirs of deceased, residing in Sates county, Missouri, aforesaid, at least ten daye prior to the first day of the next term of this court STATE OF MISSOURI, i o County of Bates, o I, J. A. Silvers, judge of the probate court, held in and for said county, hereby cer- lumber in 1902, and 506,964,749 feet In 1901. Young Railway Workman Predicts KAISER EXPLAINS ACTIVITY. Personal Calamity and Dies seein dines Three Hours Later. Attributes Capacity for Tremendous ret Work to Disetptine Acquired at Owen Turner, i 20, en Cassel Gymnasiam, the Chicago, Cinci railway, near Mune . Emperor William in a speech at aj °? Morning that he felt that great banquet given at Cassel the other] awful would befall him or day, attributed his restless activity and| and declared that if it had been Pric zeal for the country to the discipline of] he would not go to work. Two hours his tutors. The emperor attended the] later he fell from the top of 2 gymnasium at Cassel and received {n-| hoisting crane, alight struction at the same time froma num-| °ty below. Both legs were ¢ ber of private teachers, chief of whom| “I told you it was con was Prof. Hinspeter, now retired, moaned. He then implored “The very urgent and constant prepa-| men to put him on a train a ration that I received,” said theemperor.| fun far the city, “made me capable of putting on my shoul-| save his life. ders the burden of work which isbecom-| He was brought as fast | For Infants and Children. ‘a The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the 5 Signature Avesetable Preparation fo similating the Food andRey ling the Stomach a original order of publication therein referred 10, as the same appears of record in my office. Witness my hand and seai of said (seat) court. Done at office in Butler, Bates county, Missouri, this 23rd day of sep- tember. 1903, J. A. SILVERS Beat Judge of Probate. s est.Con iter |i f ing heavier from day today. Although] could carry him, and an amt wie ennai ium, Morphine ror Minecal. ||"; 0. my teachers were aware of the respon-| Was waiting at th Notice of Final Settlement. OT NARCOTIC. } sibilities they had undertaken, and util-] quickly to the hos but he w. Notice is hereby given t» all creditors and aaa ized every hour and minute to prepare|able to stand the shock. and ¢ others interes.ed in the estate of Geo, W Pi-ree deceased, that I, J. 8. Pierce, administrator me for my high calling, none of them had| hour after his arrival. of said estate, intend to make final setttement Peape of Ol Dr SSIVEL I TNER “3 a clear prevision of what an immense anagrams eee mee ere eee od atte county Poin Sad- burden of labor and what a depressing] REMEMBERED IN HIS WILL. soar to be eld at"Baulery esour, on the Besholle _ i has to carry who 1s responsibl et Sth day of Nov., 1003. bo . | yy ed In pag —ortony Gh er ain ids Pennsylvania Colored Man Received * = Ly 2 Peel hide “Not for a moment do I regret the] #5000 for Saving a Life om THE REPUBLIC’S GREAT OFFER. c studies I at that time thought severe, and the Battlefield. eis yo I may truly say that work and the life of kegs Special arrangement has been made Daniel Prime, of Easton, Pa.. a eol- work has become my second nature,” 2 ored man, has received a letter from Charles Smith. an attorney of Jack- ENGAGED TO CHINESE. son, Mich., stating that Prime is a leg- Prominent Elizabeth, VN. J., Youth to| 4tee to the amount of $5,009 under the Wed One of the Famons Ah Fong will of Jonathan Moore, of that place. Sixters of Honolulu, In the civil war Prime was a ser- geant in Company H, Fifty-fourth (col- Walter Wall Brewster, a member of a] ored) Massachusetts regiment. Jona- prominent Elizabeth (N. J.) family, is| than Moore was a first lieutenant in engaged to one of the famous Ah Fong|the Eleventh Michigan. In operations sisters, of Honolulu. The story of the| near Charleston Lieut. Moore was family is one of the most romantic inj Wounded in the leg. Prime took off the Pacific islands. Wing Ah Fong, | his own blouse and wrapped it around father of 13 girls, of whom seven mar-| the leg to stop the flow of blood. and ried Caucasians, was a Chinaman who! carried the lieutenant to the rear. The came to Honolulu fn 1858. He amassed | men never met each other again, but a fortune in the silk and bric-a-brac| Moore learned the name of the man trade and became several times a mil-| Who saved his life. Nonaire through investments in sugar plantations. Walter Brewster is 22 | Aperfec {Remmed for Constipa- ion, Sour Stomach, Diatriigen orms Convulsions Feverish- and Loss OF SLEEP. by The St. Louis Republic to furnish old or new subscribers with the only otticial aud authorized life of Pope Leo XIII. This is one great volume, bound in elegant cardinal cloth, gilt and ink stamping, with Papalcoat of arms, containing nearly 800 pages of text and illustrations. The work was prepared and written by Mon- signor O'Reilly, D. D., D. Lit., official biographer of the Pope. The regular cash price of this book is $2.50. Any one remitting $2.50 will be entitled to 18 months sub scription to The Twice-a-Week Re . public and a copy of the book, post- Needs a Gentle Warntnz. . A The Japanese are reported to be wila ‘4ge prepaid. This offer is open to years olf and ason of Kenderton 8.! tor war with Russia. Somebody vith ‘new and old subscribers. The book Senator James W. Wall, of New Jersey, ms i ai ae ae ee German andis now ready for deliv. and a great-grandson of former United Russia. ery. Address allordersto The Re States Senator Garret Wall. public, St. Louis, Mo. For Over Thirty Years pute BY is Where She Rules, Probably Frost-Bitten, In naming the new boy Francis Gro A Boston girl had her escort arrested ver, the Chicago Record-Herald says, CASTORIA. : for kissing her. Wasn't the punishment Pa Cleveland shows an appreciation of Bears the The Kind You Have Bouge sufficient, asks the Chicago Daily News, the fact that mamma comes first as far Siguetere OF THE SUMMER'S HEAT UPON TEETHING CHILDREN. without calling on the low? - we y as family matters are ccacerned. Better than ever— Light as a feather In any weather— Uneeda Biscuit Package, identified by the famous red and white trade mark design. NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY In the Clroult Court of Bates County, Missou- In the Probate rion vacation, Sept, 26th, 1S, the State of Awgoat term Missouri at the relation and to the use of W, {. Johngon, Ex-officio Collector of the Revenue of Bates County, in the Stateof Missouri, plain- will of deceased annexed, ’ Order of Publication, Now at this day comes the plaintitf by her at- of Joseph Timmons, torney before the undersigned clerk of the Cir cut Court of Bates County, in the State of the sale of 80 muel township ¢1, range $2, and 160 acres northeast sald real esta! uar er of siction 7, township 41 range 32 and, payment of said jaciee; and iti = Soacr's rast half ‘of rection 7, township 41! 4 ‘2 yer ee beniineny rim of this | for four wee court to be begun and holden in the city of Bat- ler, Bates County, Missouri, on the frat Mon- day in + sesmary I, and on or before the first ead to said petition accord- to law the same will be taken as confessed and | s\ And it is further ordered by the clerk afore- ished in the But- ler Weekly Times a weekly newspaper printed and pablished in Bates county, M ssouri, for four weeks successively, the last insertion to be atleast fifteen days before the first day of the nextterm of said court, A trae copy of the Witness my hand as clerk aforesald (seat) with the seal of said court hereunto aM xed. Done at office in Butler, on this V————— in the Probate court for the county of Bates, August term, 190%, GM Willey, deceased, C Now at this day comes C W Done, administrator » nd pre- ion, praying for an order for the sale of so much of the real estate | tify that the foregoing is a true copy of the | In the In-er-seal ¢ | Order of Publication. | STATE OF MISSOURI County of Bates. ‘ tee Court for the county of Bates E-tate of Joseph Timmons, Deceased, Mina Timmons, Administratrix, with the Now at this day comes Mina Timmons, Ad- ministratrix, with the will annexed of the estate deceased, aud presenta to the court her petition, praying for an order for h of the real estate of said de- rition and ceased described in said bition it aMdavit, stating among other things that the and satis the " wesles tmentic Above named defendant Jno. B. Henderson is a the will of said non-reaidentof the State of Missouri; whereup- want of sufMecient assets, tion that the aceompanied by the aceounts, lists and invea- that plain- tories as required b law; en examinati if ‘has commenced & suit axainst him in| whereof it is ordered, that all loreste this ovurt by petition and aMdavit the Object ed in the estate of and general nature of which is to enforce the that application as of Missouri for the delinggent and unless the contr ific legacies mentioned im leceased, and yet unpaid for such petition being persone intereat- said deceased, be notified aforesaid bas been made, ‘ary be shown on or before ; | the frat day of the next term of this court to be held on the second Monday of November, 1903 an order will be made for the sale of the estate set out in said petition to-wit: Lots ley, do, HE 1a. 8 and 14 Town Company's addi- tlon to Adrian ssourl, Or ee much of the a be suMicient for the ered, that a copy of this order ve published in some newspaper in Bates courry, Missouri, before the next ierm of this court. and that 8 eopy of the same be served on each of the heirs of deceased residing in Batee county, aforesaid, at least ten days prior to the first o! the next term of this court, 7 KE OF MIsSOURL, ¢ * County of Bates, ' 4% 1, J, A. Silvers, Judge of the Probate Court, heid in and for said county hereby certify that the foregoi a true copy of the original or- der of publication therein referred to, ae the same app of record in my office. vas my hand and seal of said (sra.,) court. Lene Butler, Bates county, Missouri, this 2th day of August A. D., ind. J. A. SILVERS, 49-4 Judge of Probate. Order of Publication, STATE OF MISSOURI, a8 County of Bates, In the Circuit Court of © ates county, Misson. ri, in vacation sept. 25, is03, the State of souri at the relation and to the use of W Johnson, Ex-officie Collector of the Revenue of Bat ‘scounty, in the State Missouri, laintif, vs, W E Walton, George A Todd, de fendants, Civil action for delinquent taxes, Now at thie day comes the plaintiff by her at- torney before the underaign-« elerk of the Cire cuit Court of Hates county in the state of Mis- souri, in vacation and files her petition and | aMfluavit stating among other things that the ; Above named defendant, Geo. A Todd is a non- resident of the state of Missouri: \\ hereupon it is ordered by the Clerk in vacation that the de- fendant be notited by publication that plainti@ has commenced a sui! against bim in this court by petition and affidavit, the object and general nature of which is to enforce the lien of the State of Missouri for the delinquent taxes of the y IS) amounting in the ageregate to the rum O° $1.60 together with interest, costs, com- missions and fees, upun the following dese: tracts of land situated in Bates count Ti, to-wit: Lots 23, 4block 24. City ‘of nut, and that unless be an ‘ar at the next be begun and holden in the city county, Missouri, on the first Menda: ruay, 1 nd On or before the first ; Of; and plead to said petitin according to law the same will be taken ae eonfe and judg- rendered according to the prayer of said onand the above described real estate sold to satisfy the same. And itis turther vrdered he Clerk afore- sai! that a copy hereof be lished in the But- | ler Weekly Times, a wee eWspaper printed and published in y, Missouri, for four weeks succestvely, th» insertion to be at least fifteen days befere the first sy of the next term of ssid court. A true cop) of the record, Witness my hand as clerk aforesaid with (SPA1.] the seal of 1 court hereunto affixed. Doue at of in Butler, on this the 25th day of September, 1s 48-4 J A. Partersos, Circuit Clerk, Administrator's Notice. Notice 1s hereby given that letters of adminis- tration with will annexed upon the estate ot Wm A DeLung, c mi, have been grant- ened, by the Bates ( ‘ounty Probate Court, in Bates County, Missouri, bearing date the Sth day of O-tober, 1908, All persons having claims |gainst said estate are required to exhibit them to me for sllow- ance within one year from the date of said let- tera, or they may be precluded from any bene- fit of such estate; and if said claims be not ex- hibited within two years from the date of the udlication of this motice, they will be forever jarred, J.W. CAMPBELL, 50-4 Administrator with will annexed. Notice of Final Settlement, Notice is hereby given to all creditors others interested in the estate of Thos D senders son, dec’d,thatI, Sarah D dand+reon executrix of said estate intend to make final settlement thereof, at next term of the Bates County Pro- bate Court, in Bates county, State of Miseourt, to be held at Butier, Missouri, on .he 9th of November, 1908. SARAH D SANDEROOW, 50-4t Executrix, Administrator’s Notice. Notios is hereby given,that letters tectamen- tary upon the cotaber PG Lightfoot, 1eceased, have been grantet to the undersigned by the Bates county provate court in Bates county, toner’ bearing date the 25th day of Septem- Tr, 1903, All persons haying claims against said sate, are required to exhibit them to me for allowance within one year from the date of said letters, or they may be lauded from repens gee ofsuch eatate:and If said claims be not exhibited withir two years from the date of the publication of this notice, they will be foreyer barred. THOMAS M, LIGHTFOOT, 43-4 Executor Notice ol Final Settlement, ~~ Notice ts hereby given to ali on, others interested in the estate of Monee nent deceased, that [, John C. Hay paulie serin of the Bates county Probate court, im Betes county, state ol Missoun, tobe held at Batler, Missouri, on the th day of November, A 1.1908. JOHN ©. Hal's," 48-48 Adminisirator,

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