The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, September 15, 1904, Page 6

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)

pryesecacegsnem@ lt iz is hs sh tb w me eo ot w ot § th th be is ia hi of be h ar x SAP SBL SE ee ce oe eS ERE EERE EEK at EH UeODORR , Started for the middle of the struc MEXICAN MEXICAN MEXICAN Mustang Liniment Mustang Liniment Maan E auteent cures Cuts, Burns, Bruises. In use for over sixty years, for Man, Beast or Poultry. MEXICAN MEXICAN MEXICAN Mustang Liniment Mustang Liniment Mustang Liniment cures Sprains and Strains. cures Spavin and Ringbone. heals Old Sores quickly. MEXICAN MEXICAN | MEXICAN | Wiusisng _inimen Miaustang 3 nimer Ad ang iihiilal wa gents eonre for Piles. cures all forms cf RReumatism. cures Caked Udder in cows. MEXICAN Mustang ang Liniment Mustang ang Liniment Mustang Liniment : Best for limbers up Stiff Joints. cures Frostbites and Chilblains. Mustang | ang Liniment Mustang Lie iniment Mustang | -iniment MEXICAN MEXICAN MEXICAN . os . » @ Mustang mmen Mustane mmen IV and mmen Pest for Sheep ailments. always gives satisfaction. drives out all inflammation. BECAME A HUMAN ‘CUSHION Girl Walks j in Sleep The Stenographer Paid it. New York, Sept. 8.—It happened Through Thunderstorm. “i ey? that yesterday Chauncy M. Depew, Lafayette, In*,. Sept. 7.—“It you! Jameg J, Hill, Willlam Rockefeller, will spend a half hour in the open alr] 5. 10s Stillman and J. Pierpont you will byw we Tgil aguin.” Morgan attended the same board ‘Thie is th, queer messace that Mise meeting in a big bank building down Ora Click, w yoo ng wowan residing} town. During the session a district sven tuiles east of this city, received telegraph messenger presented him- New York, Sept. 10—Andrew]in » cream, and, although she {8 not} 1 with a noteand a package for Baunach of Catskill N Y., is dying |eompletely well, her improvement in] ganator Depew. On the package in Fordham hospital of injuries re | the past two days has been remark-| wa, written: ‘Collect $1.40,” and ceived by falling eighty-five feet from | able, the boy waited for the cssh. The a railroad bridge over Croton creek,| With the vivid impression of the} nator pulled Gut two or three where he was at work, Baunach | dream in her mind, Miss Clark, while quarters and some small coin, and landed on his back and formed a} yet asleep, arose from her bed, and after a fruitless exploration of his cushion for the body of John Costello} without waking any members of the waistcoat and trousers pockets, a fellow workman, who fell from the | family crept quietly out of the house] jyened to Mr. Rockefeller, who was same spot. Costello was uninjured, | into the storm and made her way to sitting near him, and said in the Baunach, Costelloand another work | the home of Doctor McBride, the most matter of fact way: “Pay the man had shouldered a steel beam and | family physician, in Dayton. boy, will you, Rockefeller?” Undaunted by the blackness of the “Certainly,” was the response, ture, Baunach slipped. The heavy |might, the terrifle crash of thunder! \J, Rockefeller produced @ dollar burden made it impossiblefor him to}and the heavy downpour of rain,} ) i), “Pow much is it?” Eh; $1 40? regain his balance. He tottered back | 61e girl made her journey. Well, 1 don’t believe I have got as severs] feet and fell. Costello's end ——_—__—_——_ much as that; let’s see; no, I can’t of the beam bore him down, and he, Lost 6,000 in One Battle. make {t.”” too, fell. The third man was pinned Morgan hadn’t the change, Still- to the structure and saved from fall-| Buenos Ayres, Sept. 7.—Two thous- man had only $50 bills, Hill told from Costello in the fall. He turned} tween the Uruguayn government momentarily stunned. He quickly|led the government troops, is ar- For Infants and Children, ing. and men were killed and 4,000 she ated caantier to hie 16 Baunach probably was ten feet | wounded in the recent battle be- rap i over several times before he struck, |forees and the revolutionists, Gon- ASTOR IA Costello fell on him sideways and was eral Vasquez, minister of war, who recovered and helped remove Baun-|8erted to have been defeated and ach to the hospital. driven back, abandoning arms anu The Kind You Have Always Bought A New York Bridgeman Fell 85 Feet on His Fellow Workman. munitions, Bears the In a previous battle the revola-| Signature of TO FILL PORT ARTHUR MOAT tionists were driven back and Gen eral Vasquez, while pressing his _ i victory, was suddenly met by stub Had a Notable Stage Career. Japanese Agents at Chefo0) born resistance. The rebelsreassem-| g¢, Paul, Sept. 8.—Mrs, Sarah : bled their scattered forces and en-| Stevens, a member of the “Wa: Sending 60,000 Gunny gaged the government troops. For] Down East company,” who aled Sacks to Besiegers. three days the battle raged, with | suddenly in this city to-day, has had terrible losses to both sides, Gradu-| a notable stage career, dating from ally the rebels drove Vasquez back} October 27, 1856. Chefoo, Sept. 10 —Well informed] and according to last reports the] Mrs. Stevens was a member of the Japanese who reached Chefoo from] m{nister of war was in full retreat. | Laura Keene compauy that present- Port Dalny. to day report that the] Reports from Paraguay state that] ed “Our American Cousin,” the com- Japanese army before Port Arthur is| the revolutionists there are holding} edy President Lincoln was witness- preparing to make another assault | their own. ing when assassinated at Ford’s upon the fortress. Japanese agents theater in Washington, and saw the here are sending to Port Dalny 70,- President shot. Beside Miss Keene, 000 gunny sacks and are endeavor- Claim 70; 000 Lost on Both Sides that cast included Joseph Jefferson ing to secure 60,000 more. It is] London, Sept. 8.—The Russian re-| and the elder Sothern. reported that these sacks are to be|Ports that Gen. Kuropatkin had} Mrs. Stevens was the widow of filled with sand and used to fill up reached Mukden with the bulk of his} John C. Heenan, the English pugilist. portions of the moat protecting the] @tmy constitute the only news yes-| After her marriage she retired for Russian right flank. terday and what else has happened | fourteen years. On the death of her The Chinese report that the Rus-|in the last two or three days is ¢0-|hygband she returned to the Amert- sians are paying fifty cents each for|tirely unknown here. The estimate! canstage. Mrs. Stevens’s home was unexploded shells manufactured for|on the casualities continues to in-!in Oakland, Cal., but messages sent use during the Chinese-Japanese war. | crease, the last being that the losses} 44 relatives there tailed to reach The persistency of this report during | 0 both sides amount to 60, 000 to} them. the last two weeks entitles it tocon-| 70,000 men. siderable consideration, asindicating] According to reports from Che Foo ashortage of large ammunition at| nothing of consequence has happen- Chica > zo, Sept. 10.—That cocaine Port Arthur, ed at Port Arthur for some days. siakie titoves was declared by Wm. I k neidente of the slege, more or less Boone, 22 years old, who testified in authentic, crop out daily. Refugees ‘ Beck May Be Innocent. at Che Foo are quoted as predicting joe a s court against Fred- IC: a London, Sept. 8.—The home secre-| that the next general attack will re- tary, Mr. Akere-Douglas, hae ap-|sult in the fallof the fortress. They| “It would make you steal the hat | Holic pointed 8 commission to inquire|say the Japanese shells have set fire|‘"om @ man’s head, is asserted. “I into the eireumstances of the convie-|to the only flour mill in the place, |®™ through with it, tions of Adolph Beck, who was con-| The mill was Chinese property. Lemke is employed asa drag clerk. victed in 1896 and served one sen- He was found guilty of selling cocaine ‘ under the name ‘‘flake” and fined tence of seven years, and who was A Boy Finds $400 Ring; $100 again convicted, but was granted a “free pardon” when it developed Gets 10 Cents Reward. — that it had been conclusively proven that both his convictions were found- ed on mistaken identity. The case has caused 4 great sensation, especi- ally in view of the rearoused interest in the Maybrick case, and the charge against the police of conspiracy to secure the conviction of an innocent Maker of Thieves. ring of five carafe, valued at $400 was lost by a New York broker Tues- day evening while walking with his wife and child along the board walk. Harry Forrest, of No. 112 North Missouri avenue, after a long search found the ring. He turned it over man is freely and openly made. _ ‘The government has offered Beck, to the owner, who rewarded him with a dime. as compensation, $10,000, which he GOK: dedlite ta'4ock’ tone. aoe - , , tl setennd on Go Gromed “ties vns marked Forrest, whereupon the man not sufficient. He demanded a full wanted to have him arrested for in- inquiry, which is backed up by the sulting bim. public and the press. The case is ex- pected to develop a further sensation reflecting on poliee conduct of| i Beck Dr. Cox, Gen, Boaz Locked Him in the Vault. f sul f f § ( { f 4 Atlantic City, Sept. 8.—A diamond [reese res eseese A Mob in Philadelphia. x Philadelphia, Sept. 8 —James Par- ker, a negro, raced madly through the streets near Ontario park here yesterday, beating with a “black- jack” everyone who blocked his path, trying to escape from a mob. When the {negro was finally caught in a clgar store, it was all the police could do to protect him from the crowd. Parker had quarreled with two white boys, and is alleged to have struck them with a “blackjack.” The yelled for help, One thousand persons, who were in the park listen- ing to the music, pursued the negro. After Parker bad been captured the crowd continued to parade the nelgh- borhood and captured several ne- groes, whom they bound with ropes, The police were kept busy untilalate hour rescuing the blacks, eight of whom were locked wp after having been taken from the crowd, CU ‘his signatyre is on every bos of the genuine Laxative B:omo-Quinine teviete be remedy the! e.cek 4 Cold In ome aay There Are 10,932,777 Jews New York, Sept. 10.—A Jewish year hook issued here yesterday for the period from September 10, 1904, to September 29, 1905, the Jewish year 5665, contains statistics show- ing that the Hebrew population of the world is 10,932,777. Of this number Russia has 5,189,401; Aus- tria-Hungary 2,076,378, and the United States 1,263,218. Germany is next with 586,948 and Turkey with 466,361. Of the 600,000 Jews credited to the state of New York, about ¥ million are residents of New York city. Warrensburg BusinessCollege North Aolden Street, Opposite Court House. _ Turez Complete Courses “Book-Keeping, Shorthand and Typewriting Telegraphy. B. E. PARKER, Manager. A. LEE SMIZER, Assistant Manager. Dr. W. L. Hedges president, Com. Bank. Apvisory Boarp { T. E. Cheatham, Cashier American Bank. Ear! Coffman, Ase’ 't Cashier American Bank. For information! Address Warrensburg Business College, Warrensburg, Mo, The Parlor Meat Market, A. A. SEESE, Prop. Southeast corner square is the place to do your trading. This market is supplied with the best quality of FRESH AND SALT MEATS, and the price is right as we will not be undersold by anyone. Only prime butchers stuff is kept on sale and you are invited to call. Prime lard, 3 pounds for 25 cents. Also handle canned goods. A. A. SEESE. A FAMOUS REMEDY Direct from the Factory — Cut Out The Middle Man, Nine tenths of the people are looking for this, Now we have the largest Harness and Saddle Factory . In Southwest Mo. and can duplicate any goods in leather line--offered by cat- alogue houses. So come and see us and let us show you. Keep your money at home. ‘Segehd My cage with German Syrup” “an' ast a5 tel jou “Zortor'dens, "as as Tm m feelin’ finer ever I've been!" ive should not be the vicki of pond as he often is, but is moment fe greed te gre i: pire its ice he shor ven = German a SoreP—e jmp np: pos bo tna Brand peal fo eitecgratienct eta, ‘We keep every thing that horse owners need. Double wagon harness from $10 to $30. Single harness $7.50 to $25. Second harness $3.00 to ry Saddles of all styles and prices from the cheapest to the and the ome §h and sole leather apr ‘teat sada we inp sabes, "hors Coach Horse ON §. blankets, dusters Gad anew fas soaps, liml- ago over ee canvass bestiee trim buggy tons a was Ss pan Ler. om Bring in your old harness aol Harness and Saddlery west and our harness are all made at home. We also saveitan’ pens, SURRIES, ROAD - . We have the Bho Retail Store in the South AND SPRING No. aim, "Winner of Blue Ribbon ie dow State Fair diana Btate Weir and Amerioan anaes Show,

Other pages from this issue: