Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
She Butler Weekly Times. VOL. XXVII. BUTLER, MISSOURI, THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 1905. NO. 22 GREATEST LIVING ORATOR. | Would Enjoin Him From Giurch-| MAY BE SHOT —— * one — going. " WHEN HE LANDS. 4 Has N 1 inth : Findley, 0, March 27.—Perhaps : jas No Equal inthe World for the fires time in the history of the Deserter From the Russian After listening for more than thirty country has a probate judge bee years to every orator of national : , ay ngs Army Goes Back at Risk of asked to prevent a person from at- . fame in this country, France, Eng-| tending church. The trustees of Un- His Life. land and'Spain, my candid judgment} ton township have recetved the fol- is that William Jennings Bryan is lowing communication from the the most eloquent speaker to-day.|officers of the Methodist church, Webster, Clay, and Everett were be-| which ts self explanatory: fore my time, but I wenttv Washing-| Gentlemen: We, the undersigned, ton in the winter of 1874 when the| officers and members of the M. E, Senate retained traditions of Charles church of Rawson, request that you Sumner and had among its members prevent one Clyde Cunningham, an Conklin and Schurtz. Ben Butler epileptic, from attendin was the leader of the House end ab meee poy While poor = a eee ee solutely dominated it. Ingalls came necesalty of preventing anyone from! ‘This itself would not have been to the Senate in the elghties and #0/ enjoying the privileges of the church, very remarkable, as it often happens did Wolcott. its welfare demands such action.” | shat immigrants become homesick Wendell Phillips, in my opinton, was! The township officers, tec lng that} and pine for a chance to get back to the most natural orator thiscountry | they had no authority to actin the| their native land. But the fact that has ever produced in ourtime but his) matter, referred the question to}this man should have wanted to re- eloquence lay in the choice of words] J udge Banker. As the probate court | turn to Russia, especially at the pres- rather than the indescribable eympa® | hag no power to take such action, |ent time, was somewhat singular, for q pathetic qualities of tone and vole?! the petition of the church could not the reason that he left as deserter essential to true eloquence. Blaine}, granted. trom the Russian army, and that his had that marvelous capacity to thrill bis hearers by the tone in which | Russian Soldiers coe ap gps ean _|he uttered a common place phrase. Murder P tg, | Severe punishment—perbaps death. Beecher had the divine heart-thrill- urder Peasants, : Fr For the past eight weeks Silver has ing voice but rarely employed it.) Kutno, Russian Poland, March 27. | hoon working for A. Galamba, of this Talmage strove [very hardforit but|—Ten peasants were killed and fifty city, earning $10 00 pyar “But ” never quite attained it. Gladstone] were wounded at Lamenta March 21, said Mr Galubs bimeelt ‘ana hoa was {nsufferably dull as a parlla-|4e the result of the shooting of in- iogateed Russian, “nothing suited mentary speaker but some of his/tantry sent to quell disturbances. | him here, and T found that hie whole campaign epeeches and his arraigo-| A crowd of peasants from Benig- thought. was about going back ment of “The Unepeakable Turk,” !nowa proceeded to Lamenta to in-!home. Soto day I told him he had approached eloquence. Disreali nev-| duce the farm laborers to atrike, and | hotter get ready to start. Then he er attempted It after his first speech | rioting occurred. told me that he had received a letter. and failure. John Briget I havenev-) The Chief of Police, with a compa- telling him that everything had been er heard, but Parnell possessed the] ny of soldiers, went to the scene, and fixed up, so he eald, and they were marvelous quiver in the voice that) the troops fired two volleys at the sending him a ask to pay his ex- stirs one’s heart strings. Ingervoll | peasante, killing two on the spotand penses for the return’ trip. My own had aquired eloquence as he hat| wounding fifty. The latter were impresston is that both the man and nicety of phrasing. His greatest ad-| brought in carts to the hospital here, hie friends at home have been decelv- mirers will admit that he lacked| where seven men and one woman sulsequently died. Eleven others ed, and that he fs going home to al- speeaiay S08 wee aot dagen most certain punishment. He was twithout preparation. are dying.~ one of the enlisted men who were Gambetta was the most eloqueut psa summoned from the reserve lists for Frenchman I ever heard in the} Kutno is situated seventy miles d call fte t chamber of deputies. Rochefort {8} west of Warsaw. It has a popula- service on the second call, soon after hi t war commenced. Anum- vehement, passionate, bet. aot elo-| tion of about 10,000. ony gr malin ssa ama quent. Clemenceau reminded me of — Blaine in his mannerisms, but not A “Race War” Campaign. | ment, and he was among them. He in fi handled hi fi bl : succeeded because he had enough “From. representations to me, and |" oa, a age | Muskogee, I. T., March 26,—Mus- money to travel in getting out of his from my own experience, I feel justified | 04 didn’t appear to care much for] kogee Republicans are having more native province in Southern Russia, “I was so well satisfied that I/in recommending your Peruna to any |& choice of words. There are some} trouble over the city election. Be and fled the countey. But the Rus. purchased another bottle, and followed | and al) persons suffering with catarrhal | who like Cockran but there tsn’t &| cause four negroes were nominated, \ — t i ined uinbicot your directions which you furnish with | nervousness or stomach troubles,’— real eluquent man {n Congress to |the Republican paper in the cit Slan government never loses slg every bottle, and 1 am glad to say that| W. J. Purman. P paper In the city | its deserters, and I have not theleast day. Teller is the nearest approach |has refused to support the ticket. F ¢ of your id he will |ithas cured me. I shall certainly rec-|-Address,Dr. 8, B, Hartman, President PP’ PKev. | doubt that a trap has been laid for pt eany glee you his valuable ad- ommend the Peruna toallmy friends.”—| of the Hartman Sanitarium. Columbus, | to @ great orator in the Senate, and | Last night there was a meeting of his captare as a an he acieiies re En ONE tN nnn | he is a farcry from a score of names] the central committee and the can- anywhere near his old home, I told eens . . ; that adorn the roll of that body. didates and an assessment for the}; ; iss. a him this but did not de him Probably a Bond Issue. a x ac ann ping poe Hillocks of Dead Japs =, Tn thus deploring the decadenca| campaign was levied. Each candi |i? this but did not persuade ngressman Littlefield of Maine, a F .| Tokio, March 26—An officer who! of oratory in the country, the name date for the council wasassesaed $50 : an ig a Gane. tek por oe Wall street busy following his ven liad sunened hele Mob Saeeen S s Mr. aie = — —— a -_ ned candidates up to $150 Congress that a bond iesue of $80,- terrible fighting which occured atthe | his marvelously tender, sympathetic}each. They all refused to pay the 000,000, or more was oar. to — Sa en Pe various gates bofore tho capture cf|speech at the Henry George dinner} assessment. Every effort is being saesh the Gelcleney.. When. Congress ae st re as aa tas Mukden. He says that never in the/on Tuesday night. No printed re|made to get the negroes off the convened Speaker Cannon and other in Mexico, where he had gone for a history of war were such formidable | port of that address conveys & true} ticket, but they won’t “stand for it.” Republicans declared economy would | rog4, While in the Southern country field defenses faced by infantry | impression of man ymerits. Some of There are 600 negro votes in the control this seasion, but the Presi: |}, was afflicted’ with quiney in an attacks as the works protecting | Mr. Bryan’s phrasing was exquisite|city. Last year the Republicans Miss Tarbell in Oklah dent wants larger appropriations | ante form, aid his friends believe | Mukden. The, ground became hill-] but the magic of his voice through-| elected the entire council This year ISS Tarbell in Ukiahoma. for his world power navy and msny | that the loss of phyatcalatrength and | 0°k8 of bodies. out was indescribable. In epeaking) the negroes got control and thecam-| Perry, Ok., March 27.—Miss Ida other as reckless demands are made )enerzy that had made it possible| Tree separate forcas attacke! the | of the social reforms inaugurated by | paign is referred to now as a race|M. Tarbell was here investignting the on the treasury. for him to win a formost place in | We3tern, southern and eastern gates. | Henry George, Mr. Bryan onttony war instead of an election. movements of the Standard Oil com- Mr. Littlefield said that from the] ¢n, councils of men who control Wall | Tae strugale wae not decided for |axclaimed, almost in an aside: ‘His Roosevelt. Wishes to Slee in pany'in Oklahoma. Miss Tarbell is mates furnished to him he had | sto had much to do with bis de-|™*°y hours. Line after line of Jap- lite was a constant spring, and he p favorably impressed with Okla. 2 d tliat at the present rate Con-| wsion to drop out. Alter s short aneseinfantry went down. Finally | never asked where the water flowed. Oren. een’ detclapness ond poutbl : }was Bppropriating money the atay in Chicago, which ie Mr. Gate’s | 8 11 o'clock at night the Rossians | This new variation of an old phrase les. She eft last Thuraday for the excees of expenditures over recelpte Hmmediate destination, {he will go to broke and fled for the northern gate. | had imparted to it a sweet, almost} Colorado Springs, Colo., March 27. Cleveland and Pawhueka oil field and i nid be between | New York. Whenfthete it is expect. | They suffered enormous losses on | pathetic tenderness by the orator. 1/—Philip B. Stewart, who ie arrang-| Ji also visit the Tulea, Muskogee ed he will turn over practical control | the out side, however, a3 they were | do not know a living man who could hog A — wl oe a, and Bartlesville, I. T., fields to of all his vast interest to his son | °usht on all sides in @ trap. Alto- | have wrung the emotions of love for _ te preve m4 Aa 4 a te a study conditions. ceived a letter from Secretary Loeb, The Hand That Wards Off Coughs, Colds, Grip And Restores Nervous, Dyspeptic Catarth Wrecks. The Webb City correspondent of the Joplin Globe says: “Not many months ago a Russian named Morris Silver came to this country and found his way to Jasper county, where he has since been living, and finding more or leas profitable employment. Last evening he stepped aboard a = IKE A DEMON grip has crossed our country, leaving behind scores of physical wrecks. Cured ef Obstinate La Grippe. Henry Distin, the inventor and maker of band instruments for the Henry Victims of catarrh of the head, catarrh | pistin Mfg. Co., at Williamsport, Pa., is of the throat, catarrh of the lungs,| probably the most active.old man in catarrh of the stomach, catarrh of the Philadelphia to-day. He writes from kidneys, catarrh of the pelvic organs, | 1441 g, 9th strept, Philadelphia, Pa.: are to be counted by hundreds of thou-| «1 write to inform you that Ihad a sands. bad attack of la grippe last December which lasted more than three months, and which left me with catarrh, and several of my friends advised me to try Your wonderful medicine, Peruna. “T began with bottle the first week in March and it certainly did me agreat deal of good. Congressman Powers of Vermont Uses Pe-ru-na In His Family. Hon, H. Henry Powers, writes from Morrisville, Vt.: “Peruna I have used in my family with success. I can recommend it as an excellent family remedy, and very good for coughs, colds and catarrhal af- fections.”—H. Henry Powers, Pe-ru-na For Catarrhal Nervoysness and Stomach Troubles, Hon, W. J. Purman, ex-member of Congress from Florida, writes from 1422 Q street, N. W., Washington, D. (.: Grip is epidemic catarrh, and sows the seed. of chronic catarrh within the system. This is so true that few grip sufferers are able to make a complete recovery until they have used Peruna. Never in the history of medicine has sg remedy received such unqualified and universal eulogies as Peruna, If you do not derive prompt and satis- factory resulte from the use of Peruna, AW write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a one way or the other, as I found he had his mind set on returning. He Se will stay in Joplin a few days, until his check comes, and soon he will be aboard a steamer traveling home- A ward, to meet whatever fate lies be- fore him.” ture into the yarena of strenuous Et : ” gather 26,000 prisoners were cap | Henry George and regret at his un- {Charles G. Gates. tured at the southern and 5,000 at/ timely death by such simple words loman the western I was present at the grave of Walt|stating that there had been no bs Mey Yet ae, ' a Weltmen and heard Ingersoll’s|change in the President’s plans to Tell City, Ind.,. March 26.—Mrs. A Woman Deputy Sheriff. .| matchiess eulogy. It had been pre-| visit Colorado. Susan Sulser, who appareiitty-dropt ado Springs, Macrh 26.—Mra, | PAfed with paticnce and care, every Mr. Stewart says the President ex- ped dead ten days ago as she was Elisabeth CossG00 spoint.|eeatmce had been beaten into shap>| pects to live entirely in the open, it entering ber home in Cannellton, and ty sheriff ioe | the ediges of every word milled anew,|the weather during bis visit toji= herd Lwhoae body was placed in the cem | ed & depaty She ie the [Dab ite effect did not equal the briet | Colorado is at all favorable. sor hard colds, bronchitis, Rat pri tribute to his friend George. “The President,” vontinued Mr,|f #sthma, and coughs of al prep Renee aps eerie Tam note political partisan of Mr. bntan humble admirer.—Jul kinds, you cannot take any thing better than Ayer’( Cherry - Pectoral Cherry Pectoral. Ask your own doctor if this is not so. He uses it. He understands why it soothes and heals, Stewart, “will spend his daye in the eaddle, and his nights in a sleeping bag, wrapped in a rabber blanket.” A Canadian Heroine Dead. oe _ | Abigail " song and prams en oni |atory throughout Canade, is dead in petals of Wor, od con, | ber home in Walsingham Center. Un- ee ee com [Aided she saved the crew of the om. In enue te schooner Ou nductor, wrecked on i. of Missouri, | Long Point, in Lake Erie, in Novem- hter, Miss Stone, and ber, 1853. For her bravery thegov- . Stoxe; Representative! ernment gave her a farm, Buffalo ond Miss! chip owners $1,000 and the New nified their] XOrk Life Saving association a gold re ANPORTH, St, Joseph, Mich.: . Os. ek 00.5 for awe! Ly