The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, May 26, 1904, 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)

SAYS WHITE PERSONS “as ATTACK A THUNDERBOLT | DR. H.M. CANNON, 3) ape BLEACHED NEGROES. Wes ie Oe Dentist, ears IN bea LIMELIGHT. | General neaeuanetts Move. BUTLER, - MISSOURI. | Bishop Turner Declares That in: | Was Carefully Planned. He is|_ Will be in Adrian every Tues- day and Friday prepared to do St. Petersburg, > all dental k. Victim of Sensational At- ing on the heels of the news of the Made of dental wor! Men of a Dusky Hue. mt disasters to the Japanese fleet the Chicago, May 21.—“God never tempt at Blackmail. general staff received official advices to-day of the defeat of the Japanese force which was marching northward from Fung Wang Chang for the pur- pose of executing a flank movement on Mukden. Details of the Jispatch will not be made public until it has been passed by the war commission, but enough has been communicated to the Associated Press to make it clear thatin order to save themselves from destruction the Japanese were compelled to retreat towards Fung Wang Chang. Since Genera! Kuroki sent acolamn northward to gain the road leading directly west from Mukden, General Kuropatkin has kept it ander the closest surveillance, awalting the moment when it should be so distant from the main Japanese army as to prevent its casy reinforcement. In observing this plan the Russian with drew, and the Japanese, not finding astrong force of the enemy before them, continued to advance, When the time for action came, General Kuropatkin let General Ren- nenkampff loose from leash. Gener- al Rennenkampff had under his com- mand only a few regiments, but they were the flower of the Cossack cav- alry. May 18 he fell upon the enemy, whose number has not yet been revealed, with such vigor as to compel the Japanese retirement twelve miles toward the base, near enough, it is presumed, to have re ceived reinforcements from Gene: Kuroki, who immediately have been | advised of the awkward predicament. DROVE THE JAPS BACK. madea white man. In the beginning all men were black, but in their wan- derings on the earth many of them have become bleached. And in their unnatural pallor many of these bleached men, all of whom were made black at the begiuning, now look with contempt and indifference—often with prejudice and hate—upon their brothers, the negroes, who have re- tained the color that God gave them.” Such was the declaration of H. M. Turner, senior Bishop of the African Methodist Episcopal Church, in an addressin Quinn Chapel before one of the sessions of the church’s anpual conference. The chapel was packed with negroes who are leaders in the religious work of their race, and all applauded almost wildly. “What we negroes need is more education,” continued Bish er. “Weneed not ont¥ the various schools now under control of our church, but we need proper instrue- tion imparted. We should write books of our own, poems of ourown, scientific treatises of our own in har- mony with our color and our race. “Pon’t learn songs like, ‘Wash me and 1 shall be whiter than snow,’—a song that I would not tolerate being sung in my presence, “I do not want to be misunder- stood, though, and I will say to the credit of the white man—whose race {sat the-same~time— ever saw, and the best—that wherev- er our race tries to rise as a general rule he will help us,” New York, May 20.—Gen. Samuel Pearson, of Scranton, Pa., and Cor- nelius W. Vonderholt, a Washington newspaper correspondent, were ar- rested yesterduy on complaint of Webster Davis, former mayor of Kansas City and former assistant recretary of the interior department, who charges that they attempted to blackmail him. Davis says they threatened his life unless he paid them $30,000. During the Boer war Mr. Davis was agrent sympathizer with the gallant South African barghers, and through his connection with the Boer cause the present episode came about. That Meat Trust We are unalterably opposed to, in selling our meat on Not only WHEN WER WROTE A BOOK, K. C, Times. He went to South Africa and stay- ed several months. When he return: ed he resigned his office and becamea rampantchampion of the Boer cause He wrote a book, which he said he sold for $180,000, It was a plea for the Boer cause, and its sale, he said, explained the great amount of mon- ey which he accumulated and with which he built the Maryland and New York flats and other buildings in Kansas City, No one ever saw a copy of the book and the story got around that Mr. Davis had been en- trusted with a large sum of Boer money. It was this story that brought bout the events wich led up to the arrest of Pearson and Vonderholt, They were arraigned yesterday and held for a hearing Tuesday morning, bail being fixed at $1,500. Trust, but we are op- posed to that combi- nation called Trust the price to the consumer, whieh controls We take a pride in keeping the VERY BEST MEATS obtainable, which we sell at closest margin possible consistent with good business principles, We do not claim to sell at cost. If we did and contin- ued in business you RECENT COMMENT. COMPLAINED TO THE POLICE. —— would have good cause _—— Mr. Davis has been staying at the An Advance Army of 20,000 not to Trust us. We Why Russia Losés. Caledonia apartments, 28 West Men Came Upon 32.000 ’ Twenty-sixth street, with a friend named Grant H. Biltheimer. Yester- day he went to police headquarters and said that he had received several threatening letters from Pearson and Vonderholt. The last letter he re- ceived was written in pencil and un- signed. On the advice of the police Mr. Davis arranged an appointment with the two men. Offfcers were sent to the house and concealed. Pearson and Vonderholt came, as agreed, and when they were seated told him they came to seek an ac- counting of certain money belonging to the Boer government. Davis tried to get them to be explicit, but they sell at the same price A Russian in New York Sun, Why is it that the Russians lose their creed? Because the country is governed by the bureaucracy; it isa politique of robbery. The Emperor of Japan has power through the in- terest that every Japanese soldier and citizen has—the love tor his Gov- ernment. Do you think that the Russian soldiers love their Govern- ment? The poor men have no chance to practice to be gunners, Their money stolen; everything isstolen—shoes, clothing, food, powder. The soldier is starved, frozen, helpless; a poor, Russians West of Fung Wang Chang. Tien Tsiv, China, May 21.—It ie announced from authentic Russian sources that the Jupanese army from the Yalu yesterday suffered a defeat and was driven back to Fung Wang Chang. Niuchwang, Manchuria, May 21.— The Japanese, numbering 20,000 men, came upon 32,000 Ruasians in a strong position sixty miles west of Fung Wang Chang. It being unwise to cick a battle the Japanese retrea v- ed in good order and with great to all our customers and will not violate the Trust of any. We have put on a wag- on and will deliver to any part of the city on short notice. Trust us to give you satisfaction. A, A, Seese, doomed cur. The money goes into] would not. Vonderholt, however, rapidity Anti-Truat Meat Market. 3} the pockets of officials. Whereas, | asked for $5,000 An unofficial Russian authority the Japanese goes to the war forlove} Davis then signaled for the detec-| . i hatin was hot logan butfe 1000 000006 099000000 , ' dion a Myer St aoe eh Se eres . ai iPS NG na his yesecwn ssa io “% and the two callers were arrest-| ris say there wis cousiderable loss —_ % as no :ountry; nothing to fight for, | ed. ge agin Gage : { q aie sinccemnivcncemnnsisaiciits on both sides during the clashes, with Wrote Letter and Will Under/no conscience, nolove, = “CONSERVATIVE REVISION,” | he Cossacks harassing the flanks of A yea kriet 8) 18 - " Soto ott as the Japanese. This division presum Wreek. : on army) mia 1 the renenn T'6 SAYS SENATOR DANIEL. ably w 2 executing a reconnolssance. | Tacoma, Wash., May 21.—Praying | its defeat; that is the reason why it — The pursuit was checked when the for bis wife and child, penning them |Should lose; why it should be taught) Thinks Democratic Platform) main vody of the pata Was re- @ lesson, paradoxical, logical, for its own good. The wretched Russian soldier is but the piteous instrument by which the whole world may be helped. For Receiving Stolen Goods Nevada, Mo., May 18.— Mrs. Ola Cramer of Hoisington, Kas, was arrested at the depot here to-day. It ie charged that she was with Edward Griffith in this place just prior to Griffith’s arrest for stealing $5,000 from the United States postoffice at Gret Bend, Kas. The court that tried and convicted him returned an indictment against Mre. Cramer, charging her with knowingly and willfully receiving stolen money and having the same in her possession. Mrs. Cramer probably will be taken to Topeka for tial. an affectionate letter and executing his will, Fireman Downey, pinioned beneath the massive weight of his engine, suffering extreme agony and conscious of his approaching death, was the calmest of the crowd that witnessed the pathetic scenes fol- lowing the wreck of the Great North- ern flyer at Munroe last night. “J will have to die here, boys,’, he | said. “You can’t get mo out.” i Surrounded by hissing steam, | crushed and mangled, Downey hand- ed the letter and will out from amid the wreckage with the injunction that they be delivered to his dear ones, and a few minutes later the four hours’ struggle was over. When the crash came, the engineer reversed and jumped, clearing the wreckage, but Downey was an in- stant too late. joined. Should Deal With Present Issues Only and the Dingley Tariff. Washington, May 20.—Senator Daniel, of Virginia, who was a visitcr | atthe White House to-day, sald that the Democratic platform at St. Louis should declare for a conservative re- vision of certain schedules of the Dingley tariff. “I think the platform will treat of the things we have to deal with now,” said the Senator, “and not of the things that have been settled. Asto the tariff, I think the platform will call for changes in those cases where the manufacturers are selling Ameri- can goods at prices at the expense of home people. “Tt is a notorious fact that Ameri- can nails cau be bought in Havana or in any foreign country cheaper than in this country. The citizens of the United States do not care togive protection to establishments doing this kind of business. “Tt is well known that if a man buys material to build an engine for export, he can get it much cheaper than if heis to build the engine for use in this country. Steel rails fora foreign railroad can be bought much cheaper than when they are to be used on home railroads. tion by using Green’s August Flower ‘There haa berm grees extraver =the vrsalest of all medicines for the gance since the Republican party has | jiver and stomach and a certain cure had This was shown by the} for d. ja or in tion. It has “to tore td sedary nite howkeld tor A New Piace for Cochran. Waehington, May 18.—William F. Cochran, chief postottice inspector, will probably be appointed purchas ing agent for the postoffive depart- ment. The office was created by the last congrees and pays & salary of $4,000 a year. Much of the seandal in the postoffice department grew out of the purchase of supplies. If Mr. Cochran is selected: for the office it will come largely as a recog- nition for his services to the govern- ment in the postoffice investigation. Before he was appointed chief post office inspector, Mr. Cochran was an inspector in the St. Louis division, his field of operations being largely confined to Kansas, Oklahoma and Indian Territory. He was also post- office inspector in charge of Denver. Goop SPIRITS. Good spirits don’t all come from Keatucky. Their main source is the liver—and all the fine spirits ever made in the Bive Grass State could not remedy a bad liver. or the hun- dred-and-one ill efféeta it produces. Yc ucan’t have good epirits anda bad liver at the same time. Your liver must be in fine condition if you would feel buoyant, » happy and hope- ful, bright of eye, light of step, vigor- MILLIONAIRE’S POOR STOMACH The worn-out stomach of the over- fed millionaire is often paraded in public prints as a horrible example of evils attendant on the possession of great wealth. But millionaires are not the only ones who are afflicted with bad stomachs. beteheagi| is far greater among the toilers. Dys- pepsia and indigestion are rampant| = among these and they suffer the ‘hillion. Our money winning boo written by men who know, you all about Potash hey are needed by every man aac pil a field and a plow, and ous and successful in your pursuits. You can put your liver in five condi tail MALARIA - Germ Infected Air. Malaria is not confined exclusively to the swamps and marshy regions of the country, but wherever there is bad air this insidious foe to health is found. Poisonous gases from sewers, and ihe niusty air of darnj cellars are laden with the germs of this miserable disease, which are breathed into the lungs and taken up by the blood and transmitted to every part of the body. Then you begin to feel out of sorts without ever suspecting the cause. No energy or appetite, dull headaches, sleepy and tired and eompletely fagged out from the slightest exer- tion, are some of the deplorable effects of this enfeebling malady. As the disease progresses and the blood becomes more deeply poisoned, boils and abscesses and dark or oo spots appear upon the skin. When the poison is ft to ferment and the microbes and germs to multiply in the blood, Liver and Kidney troubles and other serious complications often arise. As Malaria begins and develops in the blood, the treatment to be the germs and poisons and purifies the blood, and under its tonic effect the del SSS effective must begin there too, §. S. S. destroys luted ilitated constitution rapidly recuperates and the system is soon clear of all signs of this depressing disease. S. S. S. is a guaranteed purely vegetable remedy, mild, pleasant and harmless, Write us if you want medical advice or any special informa- tion about your case. This will cost you nothing. MISSOURI STATE BANK, BUTLER, MISSOUR $63, 000.00 Receives Deposits subjectto Check and always has » oney to loan. Issues Drafts and does a General Ban king bus i- ; Capital and Surplus Fund = - ness, With ample resources and 25 years succes expler énee, we promise our patrons ABSOLUTE SAPEVY tor ihe Deposits and every accommodation that is consistent with sound Banking rales, Wn. KF. WAL" (Dr. T. ¢ Wesley Denton, Clerk sid Bookheeper N, President, » Boutw ARE, Vice Pres’t RS EPR Ron I EE J, R, JENKINS, Cashier, Kila Meek, Clerk, ——DIRECTORS: Dr. T. C. Boulware J. R. Jenkins, Frauk M, Voris, John Deerwester A. B, Owen, Wi. BE, Walten Dr, J, M. Christy O, R. Radford Dr, N. LL. Whipple C,H. Duteher Geo, L. Sinith T J. Wright. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GAs RASA PRLP «names Am RAR AR eg APR RAS ener martrre especies PASS EAE AS THE WALTON TRUST CO. OF BUTLER MISSOURI. Capital, Surplus Fund and Profits - + $80,726.02 Always has ready money on hand to be loaned on farme in Bates, Vernon, Barton, and;cedar Dade Counties, Mo, Very Lowest Rates of Interest. on one, three, five or seven years time, and allow bor- rowers to pay back part each year if desired, Every land owner wanting a loan should call and get our low rates and liberal terms, Money ready as soon as papers are signed. Wehave a full and complete abstract of title to every acre of land or town lot in Bates County from the U.S patent and showing all deeds of trust, Sheriff's deeds, tax titles or other conveyances that have een recorded in Bates county. Our Abstract books were begun by our Mr, Wm. E. Walton 24 years agoand are = written up daily from the county records, We furnish reliable Abstracts at reasouable prices and are re spou- ible for their correetness, Interest Paid If you bave idie won Walton Trust Company w on Time Deposits. for six months orlonger the OD ee Irs Wm, E. Walton John Deerwester, Frank M. Vorie, Paw Levy, FRANK ALLEN ; , bee TREMP AF RA f. J. Wright, SkEcy, Wm. E. WALTON, P SAAT RAR FAA AD RRR RARAR RAS 3 gpooweacnennia & The Ruralist Sedalia, Missouri. Missouri’s Leading Farm and Stock Paper. Handsomely illustrated weekly, practical, clean and up-to- date, devote to Agriculture and all of its kindred industries, Interesting and helpful to every member of the Farmer's family. Regular subscription price, $1.00 a year for 52 numbers. GREAT SPECIAL OFFER! Forashort time subscriptions will be accepted at 50CENTS A YEAR, and every subseriber will be given, FRED, 50c WORTH of RELIABLE, FRESH VEGETABLE and FLOWER SEEDS. Sample copies free. Address, naming this paper- THE RURALIST, Sedalia, Mo A VITA SASSIL SA ds Don recommend The Ruralist as one of the best Agri- culture Papers published, and will club it with Taz Times both for one year, new or renewal, for $1.25. SAVINGS BANKS. Call at FARMERS BANK and secure a small bank to place your say- ings in. You will be surprised to find how rapidly it accumulates. An excellent Si ee Home tr expo #100000 05 [overs Zar, AN How without attending to the |°" eo thus insre 7 era business of the country, There is an} of “ Trial tee Bae, ee ae ee bottle, 75e. At all drug- praning hook is needed.” way to accumulate your World’s Fair expenses, (PSII a Ve SRR eee SAR ARAR IB ASIII IE nny (PILAGLIDLE SAA DS

Other pages from this issue: