The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, September 15, 1904, Page 7

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Promotes Digestion Cheerful ness and Rest Contains neither ium,Morphine nor Mineral, OT NARCOTIC. A t C . tok, Sour Stomch, Dianne Worms Convulsions Feverish- ness and LOSS OF SLEEP. FacSimile Signature of EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. (CASTORIA. For Infants and Children. ig ihe Kind You Have ' ede 1 For Over Thirty Years CASTORIA Want your moustache or beard abeautiful brown or rich black? Use Wild; Beasts Driven Forth. Spokane, Wash., Sept. 9.—Forest fires are raging violently on the shore of Spirit lake and also near Coeur d'Alene and Rathdrum, all in Koote- naicounty, Idaho. Wild beasts are being driven from the timber. Five bears, fleeing from the flames, were killed near Athol, Idaho. Many eum- mer homes, owned by persons who live here, on Spirit lake are threaten- ed. Killed by a Tombstone. New York, Sept. 10.—Yeta Buaiko- witz, 18 years old, was crushed to death by the fainily monument, a heavy granite shaft, which fell upon her as she was koeeling beside & grave yesterday in Washington cem- etery at Gravesend. Investigation | led to the belief that the foundation of the monument might have been ' undermined by the digging of a grave nearby. Two of the grave diggers have been arrested. CASTORIA. ‘Bears the The Kind You Have. Bought Bignstare g $50,000 for Berea College Chicago, Sept. 10.—Dr. D. K. Pear- sons, this city, who has given at various times large sums of money to various educational institutions yesterday presented Berea college, Berea, Ky., with $50,000. He pre- viously had given $100,000 to this institution. His preeent gift is to pay for the installation ofa complete water works and eewer system in the college. -CABSTORIA. ibis do Tha Kind You Have Aways Bought Signstare of é Missouri Taxes the . jis the inexcess of lands seveesed any other state in" Ayers Pills Railroads Highest -Jeflerson City, Mo., Sept. 10.—The state board of equalization reports . that the total valuation of * the railroad, bridge, telegraph and . ‘telephone companies assessed by the b= a $181,142,152.57, which ex-| - ceeds the valuation of 1903 by $5,- 717,961.45. It ie the highest in the hietory of railroad assessments and the percent of increase — locally. Keep them in the house. Take one when you feel bil- ious or dizzy. hey act di- rectly onthe liver. 2.cA7%uco BUCKINGHAM’S DYE TAFT CTS. OF DRUUGISTS OR BP, HALL & CO., NASHUA, N. H Burn Jail; Lynch Negro. Huntsville, Ala., Sept. 8.—Unable to secure a negro whom they wanted to lynch by the use of force, a mob of 2,000 persons last night set tireto the jail and smoked out their victim, Horace Maples, a negro, charged with the murder of John Waldrop The fire department, which wanted to put out the blaze, was kept away by shots. Maples was taken to the court house lawn and hanged to a tree, Even after the fire was started, the sheriff would not give up the negro. The latter, however, jumped from a window directly into the crowd. The negro confessed before he was hanged. Under instructions from Judge Shel- by of the federal court, deputy mar- shals secured the names of persons who endangered the lives of the fed- eral prisoners confined in the jail. Prosecutions may follow. Burglars.Disfigure A Woman for Life, Chicago, Sept. 8.—Burglars entered the home of B. F. Crawford, presi- dent of the National Biscuit com- pany, in @ fashionable district of Evanston at 1:30 o’clock this morn- ing. While gathering a large pile of booty they were surprised by Miss Mabel McPherson, a sister of Mrs. Crawford. One of the burglars took a bottle of carbolic acid from his pocket, dashed it into her face and-then escaped through a window. The burglars had no time to get the booty. Mises McPherson is diefigured for life and narrowly escaped losing her eyes, She was removed to the Evan- con hospital, where she is reported to be in @ serious condition. The police have no clue to the marauders. ‘Corn ‘must have a sufficient supply of Potash in order to develop into @ crop. No amount of Phosphoric Acid or Nitrogen can compen-. sate for a lack of potash in fertilizers’ [for grain and all ‘We shall be glad: to send free to any the various species of laughter. At- TRADITION IS UPSET. Recent Experiments Prove That Graham Bread Is Not Best. | Conclusion Reached by Series of Com- Bolted Flour Food Said to Be the tom s.-. ithing, | 1 parative Digestion Trials—Well H Another tradition long prevalent througho he world and fostered by physicians for a century past has been upset. The United States department of agriculture has been conducting ex- periments which prove that the gluten and other nutrients in graham bread are less completely digested than the same nutrients in white bread, the bran and other wheat offals in the graham flour lessening its digestibility. This conclusion has been reached from a se- ries of comparative digestion trials cov- ering a period of six years, A’ num- ber of men in sound health were work- ingmen, others were students, men of both sedentary and active habits being included in the trials. A teamister, a college athlete, a natu- rally lazy fellow, and both corpulent and lean men, were subjects of experi- ment. In one set of tests the men were fed for several days upon graham bread and milk. Then white bread was sub- stituted for the graham, and the same number of days the rations consisted of white bread and milk. All of the food consumed was weighed and sam- ples were analyzed, as were all of the waste products from the body. The graham and the white flours were milled from the same lot of wheat. The con- clusion reached is briefly stated as fol- lows: “According to the chemical analysis of graham, entire wheat and standard patent flours milled from the same lot of hard Scotch Fife wheat, the graham flour contained the highest and the patent the lowest percentage of total protein (glutinous matter), “But, according to the results of di- gestion experiments with these flours, the proportion of digestible or available protein and available energy in the patent flour were larger than In either the entire wheat or the graham flour. The lower digestibility of the protein in the graham flours {s’due to the fact that in both of these a considerable por- tion of the protein is contained in the coarser particles (bran), and so resists the action of the digestive juices and es- capes digestion. Thus, while there act- ually may be more protein in a given amount of graham or entire wheat flour than in the same weight of patent flour from the same wheat, the body obtains less of the protein and energy from the coarse flour than it does from the fine, because, although the including of the bran and germ increases the per- centage of protein, it decreases the di- gestibility.” Those who really enjoy graham bread and find that it agrees with them should continue its use. The beneficial results arise not from increased nutrients se- cured from the food, but from the me- chanical action of the food. PROTECTION FROM ASSASSINS. Bullet-Proof Waistcoat Made for President Roosevelt—Inventor Says One Was Offered McKinley, Casimer Zeglen, a Polish resident of South Bend, Ind., has invented a bullet- proof cloth from which a waistcoat has been made for President Roosevelt. The waistcoat is of pure white silk, is pliable, and weighs less than half a pound to the square foot. It is half an inch in thickness, and is worn next the body. The durability of the new inven- tion is unquestioned, as it has been thor- oughly tested, members of the police de- partment having failed to puncture it with 44-caliber leaden bullets. “The secret of the cloth lies in the closeness of the weaving,” said Zegien. “Two weeks before Presideat McKinley was killed I offered a waistcoat to him, but Secretary Cortelyou stated that the matter could not be considered until the following month.” FLY COSTS CASINO A FORTUNE. Superstitious Gamblers at Monte Car- lo Pile M 'y Around Number Thir- teen and It Comes Three Times, A striking example of the supersti- tion of gamblers im regard to luck occurred at what is known as the “Suicides’ table” at the casino at Monte Carlo recently, A fly alighted on No. 13 after the players had been suffering from a per- sistent run of bad luck. In a moment the middle dozen was liberally backed. Then an elderly gambler piled napo- leons around 13, the less confident staking their money on transversals, .Then the marble spun. The croupier announced that the winning number was 13. Furthermore, 13 came three | !94. times in succession, and the fly cost athe casino £5,000. READS CHARACTER BY LAUGH. French Writer Tells Temperament of a Subject by the Vowel Sounds Emitted. A writer in a French review analyzes cording to this ingenious analysist, of the five vowels, each kind corre- sponding to a particular moral temper- : mask, hearty folks laugh in a phi laugh in a phleg- matic chuckle in “BE,” children and simple souls express their merriment in “I,” the bold and reckless laugh in “0,” and the misanthropists in “U.” ad ‘Street Rallways in London, London mankind laughs according to the sound | ail ee ee $50,000.00; GASH GIVEN AWAY to Users of Bz 3 iw. a In Addition to the Regular Free Premiums TO SECOND NANONAL NK, TOLEDO, Onio. ° Like aCheck Like This? We Have Awarded $20,000.0 Preside: ‘ De Five Lion-Heads cut from Lion Coffee Packages and a 2-cent stamp entitle you (in addition to the regular free premiums) to one vote. The 2-cent stamp cov- ers our acknowledgment to you = that your estimate is recorded. Cash to Lion Coffee users in our Great World's Fair Contest— 2139 people get checks, 2159 more will get them in the Vote Contest What will be the total popular vote cast for President (votes for all can- didates combined) at the election November 8, 1904? In 1900 election, 13,959,653 people voted for President. For nearest correct esti- mates ived in Woolson Spice Com- pany Toledo, O., on or before Novem 1901, we will give first You can send as many ecstie prize for the nearest correct estimate, second prize to the next nearest, etc., mates as desired, “ts etc. ailows? 8 Grand First Prize of $5,000.00 vs -99-880.08 a 2 Pr’ ,000.00 will be awarded to the one who is nearest i 900-00 correct on both our World’s Fair and Presi+ i dential Vote Contests, t 1800 Prizes— We also offer $5,000.00 Special Cash Prizes to Grocers’ Scan ome Clerks. (Particulars in each case of Lion Coffee.) 2180 PRIZES, How Would Your Name Look on One of These Checks ? Everybody uses coffee, If you will use LION COFFEE long enough to get acquainted with it, you will be suited and convinced 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 Lion Meade WE GIVE BOTH FREE PREMIUMS AND CASH PRIZES Complete Detailed Particulars in Every Package of LION COFFEE WOOLSON SPICE CO., (CONTEST DEP’T.) TOLEDO, OHIO. ee * ee Sas 10 Prises— 20 Prizes— 50 Prizes— « 250 Prizes— 0 . <a . 9,000.00 TOTAL, — $20,000.00 a i pete ass 3 oh Ser Order of Publication, Seati STATE OF MISSOURL, (4g Order of Publication. County of Bate s | STATE OF MISSOURI, To pocher soph u tot Daves Migge' © Rinoat, j County of Bates { ad in vacation Moy Tirm, 104, ‘The state of | tn the Circuit Court. May term, 1904, M. F. Missouri ut thy relation and to the use of W Flanders, plaintiff, vs. Elizabeth Hogue et T Johnson,. ex-officio collector of the revenue al, defendants. Or ver of publication. of Bates county, in the state of Missouri, Now at this day comes the plaintiff herein by Order of Publication, plaintiff, vs ME Hensk, 4 i Bows, SP his attorney, Miles 8. Horn, and files hie peti- | Now at this day comee the plaintiif herein by Allen, John B Henderson, defendants, tion and afidavit ng among other things | her attorney, W, O. Jackron, and files her petl- Civil action for delinquent taxes. that defendants Eli: beth: Hogue, Kate Wolfe, | tion and affidavit, alleging among other things Now at this day comes the plaintiff by her at- | Mrs Thomas V. Page, Allen Cobb. Theressa | that defendant C B Amyx is a non-resident of torney before the cireuit court of Bates county ; Mellon, A. D. McNaghton and — McNaghton | the state of Missouri: Whereupon it is ordered in the strte of Missouri, in vacation and files | sre non-residents of the State of Muiasour! | by the clerk in vacation that said defendant be her petition stating among other things that | Whereupon it is ordered by the conrt that said | notified by publication that plaintiff! has com- the above named defendants, M E Houck, L F | defendants be notified by publication that | menced a suit against him in this court, the Hoack, John B Henderso: ‘¢ non-residents of pledges a meg 8 salt against them !n | object an‘ general nature of which is to obtain the state of Missouri, Whereupon it is ordered | this court, the object and general nature of | a decree of this court vesting the title to the by the court that the said defenants be noti- | which .s to obtatn a decree of court declaring | following real estate situate in Bates county, fied by publication that piaintiff has commenc- | that the plaintiff has a valid and subsisting | Missourt, to-wit: Lots fourteen (14 , fifteen (15) ed a suit against them in thiscourt by petition | mortgage and lien for six handred dollars and | sixteen (it), eeventeen (17), eighteen (Is), nine and affidavit, tve object and general interest from date and that the following real | teen (19), twenty (20), twenty-one (2:), in block nature of which is to enforce the lien of the eatate, to-wit: The north half of lot flve (5) in | five (5) in the town of Amsterdam, Bates county State of Missouri for the delinquent taxes of block three (3) in Williams Firat addition to | Missouri, and that unless the said C, B, Amyx, the year 1902, amounting in the aggregateto the City of Butler. Missouri, is charged with | be and appear at this court, at the next term the sum of $47.46 together with interest, costs, a lien apd subjected to the payment of said | thereof to be begun and holden at the court cominiasions and fees, upon the following de- debt ant that sald real estate be sold to satisfy | house in the city of Butler, In said county, on scribed tracts o! land situated in Batesecounty, said debt, interest and cost, and that unless | the lst Monday in October, 1904, and on or be- Missouri, ‘to: 2380 acres; northeast qUarter thesaid Elizabeth Hogue, Kate Wolfe, Mra. | fore the first day ot term, answer or plead of the north: quarter and the south half of | Thomas V. Page, Allen Cobb, Therersa Mellon | to the petition in ause, the same will be the northeast A. D.MeNaghton and — McNaghton, beand | taken as confessed, and judgment will be ren- ter of the northwest quarter and the appear at this court, at the next term thereof, | dered scoordingly. of the southeast quarter and soutueast quarter tobe begun an: holden atthecourt bouse| And it ts further ordered, that a copy hereof of the southeast quarter of section twenty one | inthe city of Butler, in sald: county, on the | be publishet. according to law, in the BuTLER ip thirsy-nine, range thirty-two; Sixty | first Monday in October, 1904, and on or be- | WeeKkiy Times, a newspaper published in said the southwest quarter of the southwest | sore the firet day of gald term—answer or | county of Bates for four weeks successively, quarter and west half of the northwest vua:ter | plead to the petition in ssid cause, the same | published at least once a week, the last inser- of the southwest quarter, ofsectiontwenty-two | wiil be taken ag confessed, and Judgment will | tion to be at l-ast thirty days before the first townsbip thirty-nine, range thirty-two, | be rendered accordingly day of next October term of this court and that unless the said defendants be and ap-| And it 1s farther ordered that a copy hereof J. A. Partensoy, pear at the next term of this court to| be published, according to lsw, in the Cirenit Ulerk, be begun and holden in the city of Butler, Bates | BurLerm WeeKLy Timks, @ newspaper publish- A true oey from the record, Wit- county, Missouri, on the first Monday in | ed in said coanty of Bat-s for four weeks suc- [LEAL] nese my han‘, and seal of the cirenit October, 194, and on or before the thrd day | ceseively, published at Joist ovce a week, the court of Bates county, this 9th day of thereof and plead to said petition according to | last insertion to be at lea-t thirty days before | August, 104. J. A. Patterson, | Order of Publication, STATE OF MISSOURI, )™ County of Bates, Gece, In vacation August 9, 14, Laura D, Wor plaintiff, ys, Georgianna Amyx, and C, it Amyx defendans, law the same will be taken as confessed and | the first day of sald next October term of this | C. M. Bankvey, Deputy, Circuit Clerk. eleent rendered according to the prayer of | court. said petition and the above described real es- J. A. PATTERSO 8, Ctronit Clerk. - — tatc sold to satisfy the same. And it is further ordered by the court afore- said that a copy hereof be published in the But- cireult court of Bates county, this Mla peblished in Bates county, aitesrkry for Hen PATTERSON and pablished in Bates county, Missouri, for AP a N, al i : foarweeks successively, the lastinsertiontobe | 41-4 Cireutt Cl-rk ee rye yGhibert plaintitis, va Esther Gil- atleast thirty days before the first day of the C. M. Barkley, D C. eat Ri “a ese ie ecca, Bild: Tt, de- next term of said court. A true copy of the rec- Sherlis Sale in Partition. endants, In circuit court of Bates county, ord. : Pa 4 ab pigs iby Mphiig ae rae: pe de- és Notice is hereb; ven that ander an vir- | cree and order of sale made by the said court {sat} by san fl banding Sate oary beg tue of a decree in partition and order of sale | in the above entitled caus, and of a certified Done at office in Butler, ‘on this the 15th | made by the circuit court of Bates county, | copy thereof, dated May zith, 1904, I willon day of August, 194, J.A. PATTER;ON, | Missouri, at the regular May term. 1m Monday, October 3, 1904, 43-4t . Circuit Clerk, of said court, In te net lene tla dh between the hours of nine o’clock in the fore- By C. M. Barkley, Deputy, | 6nd Geeta tam Tingler, defendant, and the | N00n. and five o’clock in the afternoon of that " authority in me ves by said decree ‘and an | day at the west front door of the court house in Administrator’s Notice. order of sale, 8 certitied copy of which was | te city of Butler, in Bates county, Missouri, Mi ce cghewn ig f Mie om A ager ot hein. delivered to me on the28d day of June, 14, | silat apes vendue, to the highest bidder, of Kliza J, Feeback di Pvnes the following described real estate, to-wit: been yrantet’ to the undersigned Mentay, Ovtober 3, 1008, The southwest quarter of section one and the in Bi C between the hours of nine p’clock in the fore pron bs traed As ae eae p hatyed * t pate courtin Bates Co. ~ | section two(except two acres in the southwest Pe eeercadele the Sthaay of August, noon and five o’clock in the afternoon of that | corner thereof, described as follows: Beginning * ay are bk gy Se eae Hones at the south wettcorser of he southeast quarter persons haying claims against anid e + | of the southeast quarter of section two, town- tehas be required to exhibit them to me for sell at publicvendne, to thehighest bidder, the ship forty-one, range twenty-nine, ranning allowance within one year from the date of | following described real esta thence east seventy yards, thence north one said letters, or they may be precluded from | situate in the county of Bates hundred and forty yarda thence west seventy anybeneit of uch estate Ffeatd souri, to-wit: The west half of lot three of the | yards, thence south one hundred and forty nol hited within two ‘years northwest quarter of section five, and all of lot yrs to the place of beginning) also four acres of the publication of thte notice, th: four, five and six of the norshwest quarter of | {n the southeast corner of the northeast quare fore: ROSS H, CONARD, pepe] phd me agg tg! Bi: Sac ter of the southeast quarter Ai section : wo, th will 5 this four acres is in aequare form: afore- | Hirt Beis taeycmpany et | tld bing neti forts, Targp way, twenty-nine, and containing two hundred an Administrator's Notice aide thereof; aleo that part of lot seven in the | two acres. Also the following real estate in the Notice ie hereby given that letters ofad Pre age roo wy the estat A true copy from the record Wit- {saL] meses my hand and the seal of the Sheriff’s Sale in Partition, Eliza Ellen Gilbert, Sallie J, Hunnicutt, Ben- jamin T Gilbert, Dora Gilbert, William T. northeast quarter of section six described as | county of Henry and stave of Missouri, to wit: follows: inning tenchsins south of th« | The north seventy-three acres of the west half have te of Carrie | northeast corner of said lot seven. thence south of the southweet quarter of section six, town- the g ten thence in#| ship forty-one, range twenty-eight, in sald county; aiso the following real estate in the town ot Montrose, in Henry county, Mo.: Lots two, three, four, five, six, seven, cight, nine, ten, eleven and twelve. in biock one, and block two and block three, all in Viors addition to the town of Montrose, Henry county, Missouri, ndersign by baee ieak Renal : nd ye in said county, for cash in ving claims against vaidestay | thirty-one, ‘ cabbie them to us for silow- | Provided for In = ae Seer rH, Mato ofeaidies | — 4a.at Sheriff of Bates County, Mo cash In hand as provided for in said order and Notice. decree. OE T. SMITH Notice is hereby given, that letters of ad- 43-4 Sheriff of Bates County, Mo, tration upon the estate ef Henry W + Were granted to the un- eg EE Notise ol Final Settlement, claims at Notice is here! vem to all creditors and he estate of Louisad Bow- others interested deceased, that [ said _~

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