The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, July 7, 1904, Page 6

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| 5 0 y O 0 O a O O Five Handed Employers Exenped "sen Sooval cbocnent cf tel a CASH GIVEN AWAY to Users of Zar Tot, 3 20—fa gis ate fire to-day tn thooskell Arkansas will receive $17,952; Call- fornia, $19,947; Colorado, $9,973; of the double five-story brick baild- Idaho, $5,984; Illinois, $53,858; ing at Nos. 483 and 485 Broadway, extending through to Mercer street. lows, 036,982; K » $19,947; Missouri,[$35,905; Montana, $5,984; ene s en from the building and thedamage J In Addition to the Regular Free Premiums tft by fro, weter ead emake 70 SECOND NATIONAL BANK. ; TOLEDO, Onlo, Five Lion-Heads cut from Lion a-cent stamp entitle you (in addition to the regular free premiums) to one vote, The 2-cent stamp cov- 2 , you A Th ik. ’ mates réceived in Woolson Spice Com- pany office, Toledo, O., on or before Siamese Twins Not In it. f pvember 5, 1904, we will give first R Coffee Packages and a ers our acknowledgment to that your estimate is recorded. ; ‘i You can send as many estis QW iti prise mates as desired, Le Like aCheck Like This? Se li pnd fod We Have Awarded $20,000.00 ; Presidential Vote Contest hich bad been sunmoned second etc., as follows: Grand First Prize of $5,000.00 will be awarded to the one who Is nearest correct on both our World’s Fair and Presie Wential Vote Contests, We also offer $5,000.00 Special Cash Prizes to Grocers’ egg ed Clerks. (Particulars in each case of Lion Coffee.) 2139 PRIZES, How Would Your Name Look on One of These Checks? § | 20 cents. Everybody uses coffee. If you willuse LION COFFEE long enough to get acquainted with it, will be suited and To made the story short, Harley d there is no other such value for the money, Then you will take no other—and that's why we advertise. And we are using our advertising money so that both of us—you as well as we—will get a benefit. Hence for your leade WE GIVE BOTH FREE PREMIUMS AND CASH PRIZES Complete Detailed Particulars In Every Package of twin colts. Nothing strange about i ION COFFEE ent when it ie told that one wase horse colt and the other a mule. WOOLSON SPICE CO., (CONTEST DEP’T.) convince A CALL FOR NEBRASKA TROOPS. : The Big Land Rush May Cause Trouble in Broken Bow. Lincoln, Neb., June 80.—Governor Mickey has received several requests from officers and sheriffs in Custer £ county, Nebraska, for militia to help EA keep order at Broken Bow and inthé | surrounding country, where thou- BS sands of persons have gathered for the opening of homesteads under the new Kinkaid land law. The govern- ment has ordered Company M of Broken Bow to be held in readiness under arms, and if there is anu out- break the national guard will be put into action at once. It {is alleged that the trouble arises from the fact that cattlemen have sent their cow- boys to file en government land that is now fenced and to interfere with homesteaders who are seeking claims under the provisions of the new law. The disputed land, which was thrown open to settlers to-day, has been used by the ranchmen for grazing purposes. It has been fenced in by them, and these fences the govern- ment ordered taken down. There is . great rush for claims. Many ofthe ae homesteaders at Broken Bow are armed. 4 Omaha, June 30.—Nine million 4 ‘acres of government land in Nebraska 2 : were opened for homestead entry to- Gay under the provision of the Kin- he kaid law, which permits homestead- # ere to file on 640 acres of land. It is the largest great opening of govern- land of this nature that will be 4 , The six land officers in Ne- : brasks were the scenes of great ex- citement. In O'Neil, nearly a thou-. eand persons, a large percentage of whom were women, were in line at sunrise. Coal Rates to Advance. “Omaha, June 30.—Bituminouscoal rates from Iowa, Kansas and Mis- souri to this city and Lincoln are te be advanced from three to fifteen eentes ton July 1. The railroads | Pens. jis a readjustment and nota Jadvance. Coal dealers, How- ans have given thegraves of the Span- ish dead, Cash to Lion Coffee users in our Great World’s Fair Contest— ‘ 2139 people get checks, 2139 more will get them in the covered and dragged to the open air The breaking of gas’ mains inside heer perce ih the clatern, trom Abstracts furnished, What will be the total popular vote cast the building and the consequent fill- pew | the Bead used aan hoe j for President (votes for all can- ing of the burning structure with 4 “ta ay ODS $8 405 Cred MILES § HORN didates combined) at the election thousands of cubic feet of illuminat-| 924 the father is in a critical condi- . ’ p November 8, 1904? ing gas added greatly to the difi-|"°2- Attorney at Law, AS In 1900 election, 13,959,653 people voted culty and danger. London, June 80.—The Tokio cor- : aah tk hi for President. ‘For nearest correct esti- respondent of the Morning Post says BUTLER, MO. \ 43 FIREMEN OVER- COME BY SMOKE. Missouri and Illinois Draw Large | Militia Funds. Washington, June 30.—Acting From Factory Fire. $1,000,000 appropriated by Con- gress to provide arms and equipment. for the organized militia of the United die, were overcome by amoke and|=\*%*- Of the money apportioned, New York, June 30.—Forty-three Our money winning book: bate by men who know, tell you all about Potash They are needed by every man who owns a field and a plow, and we desires to get the most out them. They are/ree. Send postal card. GERMAN KALI WenEs @ Now York—08 Nassau Street t. St. Loule—dth and Olive Sts Halfa hundred employes were driv- Nebraska, $15,958; Nevada, $5, 984; North Dakota, $7,979; Oregon, $7,979; South Dakota, $7,979; Texas $35,905; Utah, $5,984; Washington, $9,973; Wyoming, $5,984; Arizona, $5,767; New Mexico, $5,234; Okla- homa, $13,103; Hawaii, $7,500. White Lead in Cistern Poisons Illinois Family, Carlyle, 01., June 80.—August Ty- berendt, aged 21 years, {s dead, and his father, Henry Tyberendt, his wife . and three children, are seriously ill, 5 and 6 per cent due to white-lead poisoning. They live miles southeast of Carlyle. Re- cently their house was painted. A Money to Loan. quantity of the paint was accidental- ly dumped into the gniter, and this Close Loans at once. was estimated at between $150,000 and $200,000. The fire was so situated that it was difficult to fight and it burned for more than two hours before it was brought under control. The smoke from the burning material was so dense and so pungent that the firemen could work in it for buta few minutes at a time, and many of those who braved it fell prostrate where they stood. Someone who fell ly an hour before finally being dis to be cared for by the large relief that the Japanese second army has effected a juncture with the first army and that the whole force now has a pan ES I i cceemenvetnatarne tee front of 120 miles. reaneendenaed East Side Square. for the nearest correct estimate, The famous Siamese twins have prize to the next nearest, etc., long been noted and by many re garded as one of the world’s wonders. As an instance of freakdown in the superlative they have for a long time ry for an old mare owned by a Vernon ~ : county man to make the distinction TOTAL, $20,000.00 so long accorded this leading eide- show attraction like the legendary Removal Sale ! D. Shute, the Harwood rural route mail carrier, is the owner of a mare that sometime ago gave birth to I will close out my entire stock that, bus the strange part is appa:- TOLEDO, OHIO. Such things may have occurred be- fore, but if so we have never heard of Expect Kuropatkin to Make Suc- cessful Retreat. St. Petersburg, June 30.—Kuropat- kin’s evacuation of his positions in the mountains is taken in military quarters as the prelude of a success- ful retreat. The Japanese grand army is considered entirely too pow- erful to be resisted by the Russian troops now {in the field. Should Kuropatkin, ignoring recent lessons, elect to concentrate at Hal Cheng or Liso Yang to receive the Japanese onset, only a victory, which is deem- ed impossible of achievement, would save him from fierce denunctlation in court and military circles here. Already the question of correspond- ents, “Will Kuropatkin retreat?” is met by certain members of the gen- eral’s staff by the counter question, “Ie Kuropatkin mad?” The best military minds argue that Kuropat- kin has shown himself incapable of resisting the extended line of the Japanese, and there is no reason to believe he can do any better when that line is vastly contracted, not- withstanding the Russians’ advan- tagein having the morecompactand inner army. Order German Gunboat to Ge te Port Au Prince. Berlin, June 80,—The German gun- boat Panther, now at Newport News, has received orders by cable to sail for Port au Prince immediately. The sailing of the Panther for Port au Prince is due to the decision of Gerthany to insist on the punishment of the palace guards who recently threw stones at the German and French ministers while the latter were driving past the palace. Will Take Bodies To Native ‘Country. Madrid, June80.—The government has decided to transfer the bodies of thirty-threesailors whe died in Amer- ica during the Spanish-American war and interred on Seaver. Island to their native ne at national ex- ‘The newspapers speak in terms of praise at the attentions the Americ- it. It eeems to be one of the unfath- Cleveland to Keep in Touch With | omable mysteries of nature why such a thing should occur, but the truth Convention. of it is vouched for by men whose ve- Sandwich, N. H., June 30.—For-|racity is above question, and wecan, mer President Grover Cleveland {s| therefore, state it as an absolute having the Western Unton telegraph | fact. company construct a private line} We are told the horse colt is still from Madigon to his new summer|living, but the little mule appears home in Sandwich, a distance of fit-|not to have liked the society of his teen miles, Mr. Cleveland is expected | brother (or would you call it thas?) to arrive here to-morrow, and the|{for when ten day old he gave up life fact that he is having the private}asa bad job and quietly passed in telegraph line built ts taken to indi-| his check—Nevada Herald. cate that he intends to keep in close oad SISLSSSAS ISAS AA. Vudu touch with the doings at the St. Mob After a Man’s Life. Louis convention. South Haven, Mich., June 30—]§ Cleveland were that on leaving| Charles L. Allison, superintendent of Princeton he would go into retire-} Methodist Sunday school, and a We are in the market for your hay and grain for . which we will pay the highest market price. Will ment here, where he would befarfrom| Wealthy contractor, was arres' telegraph, telephone and newspapers. | last night on the charge of criminal try ‘and fornish sacks to patrons when ready to thresh. His object was to obtain complete | 4ssaulton the 4-year-old daughter of We keep a full line of feed on hand at all isolation from the world during the} Charles Secor. days which are expected to be mo-} The news spread and at midnight times, and also handle one of the best brands of Kansas hard wheat flour, mentous at St. Louis. & mob of citizens surrounded thecity That this forecast was without) hall and demanded the prisoner. A Try us when you wish to buy—don’t for- get us when you want to sell. REPAIRING PROMPTLY DONE, NB. JETER, § : 5) 0 at cost, nothing reserved, until § ® 0 0 0 Watch Inspector of Mo. Pac, Ry. GSSsoosssoossesoosososssos foundation is shown by the building| fight ensued with the sheriffs and of the private line, which, {¢ is believ-| deputies. The prisoner was epirjged ed, was prompted by something| through the basement door and was more than the natural desire of a|driven to Paw Paw and lodged in man of Grover Cleveland’s promi-| jail. ¥ nence to follow the progress of the ee {n @ precarious condi wer sme! gz... Peoples Elevator Co. St. Paal, June 30.—With a silk tle ‘Laxative Bcomeeisioe sacs knotted tightly about the neck, the the remedy that curses = cold tm ome Gap | JES body of 4 stylishly dressed woman who had been strangled to death was A“Bad Man” found floating in the Mississippi River at the St. Paul boom. The Warrensburg BusinessCollege "North Aolden Street, Opposite Court House, : THREE Compiarn Courszs Book-Keeping, Shorthand and Typewriting — B. BE. PARKER, Manager, A. mn SMIZER, Assistant Manager, Apvisory Boat {Ris E. Cheats Laregyahe met oe 9 Bari Cofiman, 4 Abs’ Cashier American Bank. % For information! Address ‘ bib. Busines teed The body was Identified as that of | aid to have four notches on his pistol Mise Rath Teachout, of Minneapolis, | presenting four of his enemies killed Miss Teachout left home Saturday |®# the result of feude. Hie religion to.attend school and had not since | !s of the practical kind, atid he has

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