The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, October 26, 1905, Page 4

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)

piven BALLOON ROSE 12,000 FEET, The Remarkable 875-Mile Trip of Paris Aeronauts, Bridgeport, Conn., Oct. 23.—E1- ward George Cunliffe, the Adams Ex- press employee who disappeared from J. L. Terrell Won the Macon, | Pittsburg, Pa., with $101,000" in cash, was arrested here to-day. He Mo., $50 Agricultural = ~e seenagse a with a small amount of oil meal for . hog. feeding. Perhaps the farmer i i burg. He declared thatthe mone ; . tnlidocs which he took mae intact and that is{°82 With greater profit feed his hogs Macon, Mo., Oct. 25 —J. L. Terrell, ‘could be restored, but he declined to on aration composed of three-fourths of Callao township, who won the$50/ 4.4 ontil hie return to Pittaborg | °°"? meal and one-fourth alfalfa hay. —- cash prize on corn at theagricultural| .1006 igie hidden. In his pockets, The hay can be produced on the farm , . fair here, was laughed at four years) 510. arrested, was found $290 in and besides being profitable to feed Whirled Along 75 Miles an Hour ago when he began the practice of ; - |to the hogs is also profitable = be breeding corn. Mr. Terrell said it F count of the great advantage it nen Atmnephere wane on was as necessary to breed corn toget Bascig — pore = = be to the land on which it grows. Liquid Froze—Continued Hail | resuitsas it was live stock. Forfour aid of the police and detectives was| 42 experiment conducted at the Earth years he has been breeding his corn saleded. Alithe Kebsanere wakbiad Nebraska station showed that when at 6,000 Feet—To the and results are shown by his getting carefully, but Cunlitfe was not arrest. |°°"" Slone was fed to hogs, it cost in Three Minutes. the prize over a hundred other con-| 44 yntiy ‘ate in the ‘morning when he $448 per hundred pounds to pro- Paris, Oct. 23.—Jacquea Faure, testants. : duce pork wien corn was worth : Mr. Terrell began by selecting his / aeitss wise tatis 30 cents per bushel, and adding 6 who went with a companion in abal-| style of corn. Then he would choose tendent Birmingham, a detective |°euts pet hundred for grinding. In Joon from Paris to Leutechau, Hun-| eary ag near his idea of perfection as snmeal Taesehi Henry Curtis, the|the #ame experiment when 80 per gary, 875 miles, wave a description |it wag possible for him to get. He ah bl ths Adena ress compan cent of the feed was corn meal and 20 ot his voyage above the clouds and) would plant the corn from these 9 ont Ciba pect of vod per cent alfalfa leaves it cost only of the night journey through glow- twenty eare in twenty eeparaterows aan An cerrel toren that Cun |#3-40 per hundred pounds, or a eav- Ing moonlight {n freezing weather. {Ty the fall he would gather the corn aaameiated that he took the money, | ‘08 in favor of mixed feed uf $1 08 “On quitting Paris,” he said, “we| trom each row, weigh it, and select alien amin dies? teak rd per hundred. rose toan altitude of 6,000 feet above] big seed for the next season from the , seeae* cab Caaliie The alfalfa used in this feeding teat the clouds Above us, however, at! mogs perfect. specimens. Mr. Terrell a oy Saal oe all do anything. | "88 the shatterings picked up trom perhaps 12,000 feet from the earth, | .ayg in four years he has an ideal Wass pha on expect Pres oo the barn floor and was valued at $10 was another cloud belt. We whirled type of corn that will yield) agen of only $65a month| Pt ‘on. along between these two belts in) rom seventy-five to one hundred pe Prater ofdollarsa| 12 this same experiment a elaugh- clear but frightfully cold atmosphere. | by .hels to the acre on good ground rn a e tempted and I fell, 1|*®" test was made to show the influ- All our water and other liquids were! with an average season The rs Scie * lence of the mixed feeds as compared . i ave handledlarger sums, I remem- frozensolid. Hail descended continu-| oh gracter of corn selected has asmall be hen I had X milliondollars with a straight corn diet on the de ally. At midnightexactly, aremark- | oo} with large grains, The cobs are e ORGS Wi ble disturbance in condition took | woyered to the tip end with well devel- but [| "lopment of the bone and internal organs of the pigs. In the lots fed place. The cloud banks above and oped grains. Mr. Terrel! also haa corn and alialfa the internal organs below us split as if by magic, and We} carefully watched the well and were found to be better developed again saw the earth beneath us. I/ smoothly developed grains, and has andina more healthy condition than believe the mass of light we 84W| yeed them in his breeding purposes. those fed on corn alone. The great beneath we must have been Stras-/ tHe said he was laughed at when he advantage of alfalfa as a bone pro- burg. : suggested the plan he has so success- ‘From that onward I was able to fully followed, but many of hisneigh- ducing food was shown in this teat Bristol Conn., Oct. 23.—Nearly| whore it took an average pressure of tell our bearings by the lght of the] pors are now imitating him and they pole star. From midnight to 5:30] ang they get a great deal better re- $80,000 of the plunder stolen by 510 pounds to break a thigh bone Edward Gedrge Cunliffs from the trom the pigs which had been fed on o'clock {n the morning we glided] gy)¢, Adams Expris: company in Pitts-| ajtalfa and corn, while {t took only along in the glow of a magniticent burg was recovered at the home of/an average pressure of 825 pounds moon, Poisons in Food, Cunliffe’s brother in-law, Joseph W.| +o break the thigh bone from a pig “AtG o'clock in the morning We] Perhaps you do not realize that) Boardman, The money was in 4| that has been fed on cora alone. rose to 12,000 feet and continued to] many pain poisons originate in your! suitcase sent from Bridgeport to| ‘The test referred to shows conclu- rise. Wewereswept ulong at aspeed | food, but some day you may feel a! Boardman and had not been opened sively the great value of alfalfa for of nearly seventy-five miles an hour. —— o Ae ions Key bp Pills up to the time that Boardman’s supplementing corn for feeding young All this time, the morning sun was} |. guaranteed to cure all sickness house was visjted Boardinan knew] hogs, also for feeding brood sows, expanding the gas in the balloonand | due to polsons of undigested lood—|nothing of the money being in the| The best results will be obtained from we were drying ourselves nicely, Yet/or money back. 25c at Frank T.| house. the alfalfa if it is harvested by the all the time we were gradually sink-|Cleys drug store. Try them. time the first blooms appear, and be- ing. Overboard had gone all our A Guaranteed Cure For Piles fore it is fed it should be run through ballast, our spare clothes, bags ee Millionaire Died in Poverty. Itching, snd, Bleodin ot poserat an ensilage cutter and then wet and rovisions—in fact everything which 3 ‘: an, 1a les. . Druggists refund mone i meal. For fat- fended to weigh us down, Wewere| Pelliagham, Wash. Oct. 18~Ex-["pazo OINTMENT falls to cure enc a Nae ae racing, and took every advantage amination of the effects of William|any case, no matter of how lon, tourth of the total sation should be ' .| Wilson, a stone cutter and marble} standing, in 6 to 14 days. First ap-| fourth of the total ra but all was useless. The moment worker who died here to day in desti- | Plication gives ease and rest. 50c. It] alfalfa, but for growing pigs or brood had come, as it comes to all balloon- y your druggist hasa’t it send 50c in}sows a much greater proportion of ists, when the gas must dissipateinto tute circumstances, disclosed the fact stamps and it will be forward:d post! the alfalfa may be profitably used. aheais. Were 180004esidtiove that $300,000 in cash, left from the] paid by Paris Me ticine Co.,83, Louis, Gro. B Ex ise 3 estute of a brother, J.R. Wilson, who] Mo. , preterm, ground and still hurrying along when fe fi Dany, auton dancalé Secretary State Board of Agriculture. the descent began. In seven minutes dled reveay y jn Pera, pe ure pre we had dropped through 12,000 feet 1 New York, belcefh lube betr Shades spar otapace. Iu twenty micutes wecame The brother ‘8 will further bequeathed down in some trees in the neighbor-|® third interest in ateamshipe and hood of Leutschau. We -came into other property; making the total contact with the earth gently and value ot the daberivance BaRrly $900,- 000, In addition $60,000 cash trom the estate of another brother, R. A, Wilson, late editor of the Belfast, Ireland, Morning News, was await- ing the appearance of Willlam Wil- son in Now York. Wilson’s employer sent him to the hospital and had him cared for dur- ing his sickness. Some timeago Wil- son told his employer that he had a millionaire sister in New York and a son who is a lawyer in thatcity. He steadfastly refused, however, to give their names, saying he had been a scapegoat and did not want them to know of his present condition. Evi- dence of his wealth was discovered in letters in his trunk, which urged him to go to New York. "0 Corn for Feeding: Hogs, (Weekly Argricaltural Letter.) In last week's letter we showed the the great value of supplementing corn | | | in cash. I was tempted then, thought itover and decided to be honest.” The robbery for which Cunliffe is wanted in Pittsburg was committed the night of October 9. GET $80,000 FROM cUrUIFrE, PPE, PPP PPS PPS PPP LED LA OLE LEAPED RRA Oe | | A Muskogee Jail Record. aE aa Muskogee, I. T., Oct. 23.—Marshal An Order Mistimed. Leo E. Bennett, who has been in| Tbe Tatler. office eight years, has just completed| A celebrated Continental specialist, some interesting statistics relative|to whom time was literally money, to the number of prisoners handled|and who was possessed ofa flery while he has been in offiee. There|t2mper, made ita rule that all pa- were 8,421 prisoners placed in jaf); | tients should undress before entering 2,044 have been sent to other pris-|his consulting-reom so as not to ons; 1,304 have served sentences in| waste any of his valuable time. One the Muskogee jail; five have been|day a meek looking little man enter- hanged in the jail yard; elghty-eight|ed with all his clothes on. “What died in jatl; 2,221 were released on|d0 you mean by comingin likethat”” bond; 116 were sent to other courte | 8aid the dostor, ine rage. “Go and tor trial; 2,340 were discharged from | strip at once! prison; 233 remained in jail October} ‘“But 1—” faltered the man. ; 15. Itis believed thie is a larger| “I tell youl’ve no time to waste,’ number of prisoners than have been | yelled the doctor, and the poor man handled by any other jail in the ter-|lefs the room in haste. When his ritory in a similar length of time. ‘| turn came he re-entered the room in suffered no damage.” He Was From Missouri. A tourist from Missouri hit the wild and wooly west with hayseed in his whiskers, no buttons in his vest. The patches on his pantaloons re- sembled Asia’s map and the roguish glimmer in his eye bespoke the ready serap. The kids all guyed ‘Missouri,’ with flour sack filled with clothes; ‘they said he’d take a ‘tie pass’ back before the winter's snows. But old ‘Miesourt’ got a job and settledin the west; his nickels grew to $s, his $s ° Grave Trouble Foreseen, Revolution Imminent, ; It needs but little foresight, to tell] ‘A sure sign of approaching revolt that when your stomach and liver|and serioue trouble in your system are vadly ailecwd, grave trouble is|is Nervousness, slerres..uua, or _ @rew to fives, while the dandy dudes pes nes. haste. ‘‘Now then,” said the doctor, that > agg at him were idling out An Increase in Army Crime. aan. better. What can I do for their lives. A homestead on the des- re ‘ ert where a wildcat wouldn’t stay; he Washington, Oct. 23 —The annual “a - She tesietionk eoclagy. worked and planted in the sand and res sg acctainanmnione te: pes © , Te eames by in measured Father and son Drowned. shows that of the commissioned offi- The Better tread. ‘Missouri’ showed them how| Linn, Mo., Oct. 23.—When return-| °°"? tried last year by general court- Ws . é —and when he saunters down the| ing Tuesday night from Frankenstein martial, thirty-five were convicted ay ‘ street nobody guys him now! The|to theirhome, Dr. Frank Lane, a and thirteen acquitted. Threecadete f : a boys who wore bigh collars and hoot-| physiclan of this place, and his 7-year- | 994 4.393 enlleted men were convict- ie The tissues of the throat are ed bim 80 gay now haul manurefor| old sou, Robert, wore drowned in |°d 924 356 men were acquitted. The| inflamed and irritated; you old ‘Missour’ at 50 cents a day.| Loose creek at a point, it 1sassumed, | *°¢4! number of trials before general cough, and there is more irrita- _ And when they heard the startling| about twenty-two miles from town. court-martial of 4,800 cases shows! tion more coughing. You take _ ymews their hearts within them sank |The bodies have not yet been recov. |°" S tee - 552 cases over last! «cough mixture and it eases the] ’ ‘for old ‘Missouri's’ gone to townand ered. It is believed the bodies may |9°®" be “dl “i io maisly doe to irritation—for awhile. You take opened up a bank have passed into the Missouri river, the inet thats lange. masher of de: Tgs 7 ae a eee as Loose creek empties into the Mis- sorters have ere apprehended and ] 9 iv Bryan to Meet the Mikado. souri near Isbell station. A reward brought to trial. The gamher af} 7 Tokio, Oct. 22 —The American min- | of $100 has heen offered oF their re- convictions for desertion increased ae Out, 22 - eter, Lloyd u. Griscom, will present |covery. Dr. Lane was a Mason and 420," Sh0 bomber of men-onnneiane . William :. Bryea to ft Pte Modeen Woodman. to dishonorable discharge was 2,529, E M U L Ss I O N arday. Huntington Wilson, secre and it cures the cold, That's of the American legation, gave what is necessary. It southes the pn in honor of Mr. Bryan. throat because it reduces the ut Ar”. ninletor of fvign irtitatior ; ~--es the cold b Maire; Raron Kentaro Kaneko,| ahead, unless you take the pro; q ; Bitters|it drives out the i mber ul the house of peers, and M. medicine for your disease, as ‘ Hatani, the vice minister of{ John A. Young, of Clay, N. Y. She eaye: “ neu [THE CORN BREEDING PAID,| The $101,000 Thiet Caught ‘Alfalfa as a Supplement ¢ MISSOURI STATE BANK, BUTLER, MISSOURI. ESTABLISHED A. D, 1880 Recelves deposits subject to check and slways bas money to loan. drafts und does a General Banking business. With ample resources twenty five years eucceseful ex: . we romise Our patrous ABSOLUTE SAFETY FOR THEIR DE. OSITS and every accommodation in the way of loans that {a consistent with sound banking rules. STATEMENT SEPTEMBER 18th, 1905. Money loaned... +.$154,090.69 Bavk Bofiding... 8,000.00 Furniture and fixtures... 1,500.00 Cash on band and in other Ban 57,428.88 Stocks and Bonds.. 2,000.10 Overdrafte............. r Capital Stock . Surplus Fund.. 10,000.00 Due Depositors.. 155,988 22 RUDD issccessiserianece 2,208.70 $223,191 92 WE WANT YOUR BUSINESS, Wa. E. Warror, Preatdent. J. R. Jewxins, Cashier. Dr, T, C. Boutwarg, Vice-Pree. Westry Denon, Ase’t Cashier, Corsiy Gararb, Clerk and Bookkeeper. APPA | PP PPP PPE PL PL IPPPPPLPILLS APL LPPIPILS. THE WALTON TRUST CO. OF BU Always has ready mouey op hand to loau on farm: in Bai Vernon, Barton, Cedar, Polk and Dade Counties, Mo, ra VERY LOWEST RATES OF INTEREST on one, three, five or seven year time, and allow borrowers t pay back part each year if desired, Kvery and owner wan ing & loan should call) and get our rates and liberal terms. * Money ready as soon as papers are signed. Wehave a ful) and complete abstract of title to every aore of land or town lot in Bates County from the . 8 patent and showing all deeds oi trust, Sheriff's deeds, tax titles or other conveyances that have heen recorded in “Bates county, Our Abstract Looks were begun by our Mr, Wai, E, Wal- ton 85 years ago and are written up daily trom the county. reo- —, i . be omge 2 somes Abstracts at reasonable prices and sible for their correctness, ) TM Dae fo ess, INTEREST PAID ON If you bave idle money for six months or longer th Walton Trust Company will pay you interest on ft. Statement on September 16th, 1905. TLER, MO, Real Estate Moa tgages, 191 Bavk Building _— . 1000.00 Other Real Estate 1,482 28 Bonds and stocks 38,708.00 Cash on hand and in Banks 21,604.44 Abstract Books 500.00 " $226, 093,91 Cay ital Steck 55,000. Surplus Fund and profits . 47 roe - Deposits 124,697, 7: $226,998.91 Wm. E, Walton, Pres, Sam Levy. Vice Pres Fank All - A, Allen, Acs't Sec, A. A. Peach, Clerk and Bookkeeper -” W. D. Yates, Abtrsactor, W. J, Nix, Clerk, The Great Paper of the Great West The Kansas City Star Everywhere recognized as the strongest and most reliable news- paper in the most prosperous region of the United States. A 5 ‘eubeription pricé. | The K general and special service of the New lights upon the world’s most interes WHEREIN IT LEADS ITS UNEXCELLED NEWS SERVICE embraces the continuous report of the Associated Press, with dispatches every hour; the ork Herald; the Hearst special correspondence in Washington, D. €; transcontineutal leased wire service and trom THE STAR’S, own representatives oe city, Mo.; svaets, ery and Guthrie, Okia., in addi- ‘Ze ol news that - aed other alert fepreenttivon comes daily from several hun. ORTS AND COMMENTS hi i tive value that causes them to be telegrapheg to all panto ok ‘the United States the moment THE STAR comes from the press No Western man even indirectly interested in the value o! tood pres stocks and securitivs ean afford to be without THE TAR’S daily record of prices and conditions, ied SPECIAL hn gh inc’ude The Chaperon’s colomn, in ons pertain! social custome and affuirs, a ene, oii and subjects and wide “A for inquirers on other department iscellaneous articles throw these in addition to a vigorous ed! pendent politically, and a Sunday i matter aod hamen interest. ins toouprtgnns Thirteen Papers Each Week for 10 Cents. THE KANSAS CITY STAR WAS THE FIRST—and fs still the ono per to deliver a complete morning paper, THE ISAS CITY TIMES, to ite aubscribers.without increasein the ansas City Weekly Star Is of special interest to farmers, ‘because it printsamore complete and intelligible account of the markets than any other paper in the country. SendTwenty-Five Cents for One Year's Subscription! » Address, THE KANSAS CITY WEEKLY 8TaR, paige _ Kansas City, Mo, PPPPPIR LA LIRA LLP ALRPLALAL PPLE LG EP i. 4 | et ‘Test 25 | ‘Years :

Other pages from this issue: