The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, December 14, 1905, Page 1

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—6« The «Butler Week VOL. XXVIII. Pn fe Senor Quesada, Cuban Minister to the United States. Senor Quesada, Cuban Minister to the T #ted States, 1s an orator born,—In who heard Quesada “I have seen many of strong emotional but I have rarely witnessed such a scene as at the close of Quesada’s the dead patriot, Marti.” Ina letter to The Peruna Medicine Come @™ article in The Outlook for July, 1899, by George Kennan, @peak at the Esteban Theater, Mantanzas, Cuba, he said: Gudiences under the spell of eloquent speech and in the grip @xelitement; | @ulogy upon pany, written from Washington, D. C., Senor Quesada says: “Peruna I can recommend as a very good medi- cine. It is an excellent Strengthening tonic, and it is also an efficacious cure for the almost universal complaint of catarrh.’’---Gonzalo De Quesada. Congressman J.H. Bankhead, of Ala-} There is but a single medicine which Bama, one of the most influential mem-| is a radical specific for catarrh. It is CUBAN MINISTER 32. U. S. Recommends P bersof the House of Representatives, in sletter written from Washington, D. C., Gives his endorsement to the great ca- farrh remedy, Peruna, i the following words: “Your Peruna is one of the best medicines | ever tried, and no fami: shonld be without your remarkable gemedy, Asa tonic and catarrb cure Peruna, which has stood a half century test and cured thousands of cases, If you do not derive prompt and satis: factory results froin the use of Peruna, write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full statement of your case and ho will be pleased to give you his valuable ad- vice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The i kaow of nothing better,"'--«J, H, Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, 0, All Bankhead. correspondence strictly confidential, Article Sustaining the Courts Actions. Rica Hiwx, Mo., Dee, 5, "05. To the tax payers of Bates County. We tind that quite a number oftour citizens are condemning the County Court for advancing money to the Drainage District to meet the expen- ses incurred in making the survey and estimate for the proposed tm- provement, and being satisfied that those who are now censuring the court would not doso if they entirely understood the situation, we have decided to write these few lines, hope- ing that we may be able to cause those objectors to view this matter in a different light from what they are now doing. After the present system of drain- age was proposed and the prospect for its adoption began to assume serious proportions there were a great number that opposed it, think- {ng that the county would be at the expense of building the bridges made necessary by the construction of this great artificial water course. But that objection has been set atrest as the drainage district mustin allcases build the highway bridges that are needed for the accommodation of the travel. But we will now return to the pres- ent objection. If you will read sec- tion 8298 in the Revised Statutes of 1905 relating to lands, swamp and overflowed land, you will find this clause: “All costs exeept of construc- tion and collection of delinquent as- sessments, or installments, and ex- cept those taxable to the petitioners or remonstrators or appellants SHALL be paid out of the county treasury and refunded tc the county out of the first money received upon assessments, or from the sale of bonds iesued under the provisions of this article.” By way of explaining the above, if you will turn back to section 828 3, 4. War Again Says Chaffee. Greatly in Demand Angeles, Cal., Dec. 11.—Ata| « medicine which meets modern re Adva R. Chaffee, lieutenant general | ¢ army, predicted that the United States will again goto war. This pre was made in Genera! Chaffee’s regarding the work of the » He said: tlemen, war will come again. are plenty of men in this room will see our country at war . Not on our own soil, per- You must remember that we Bow become one of the nations earth. We have great inter- to defend that war comes we must be tly prepared for it. Modern ‘fe not what war used to be. No| fe now fitted so command troops | The Territory Bur- glar Get Old Coins. fe-npt a eclentific and well train. money, chances the law to which We have j uded }men. Modern war must be ecien- MEG clomid Wo otk ne can our county afford to lend ite | Really trained to save human life. Giepose of the collection withoat de-| Credit for the short time which it will “The Japancee are a imnilitary peo- tection; have to wait before being reimbureed? bat we are not.’ We do not get |” aprinnipiniahninincnidemconinnts We will eee. A few monthe hence the | ga with’ military ‘preparations as drainage bonds will have been placed fie be bes wo should be ready for | AMON Fast In Ropes, | nt ond sold, aad ite ” Takes Wild Ride in Balloon. —jcounty paid back the three or four entangled in the guy ropes of « bal- Joon and, when the airship ascended, @ badly eprained ankle, A Guaranteed Cure For Piles d | sedading'tn'6 to 14 daye Nothing {s more in demand than “ pablic reception {n his honor General , quirements for blood and system neer, such as Dr. King’s New Life Pilla. They are juet what you and chief of staff of the United States fe ne poaalh bin Mt ahd ieee troubles. Try them. At Frank T. Clay’s drug etore, 25c., guaranteed. Musk » 1. T., Dec. 11.—A bur- glar ne ® room in the Hoffmen:/#a® and any other expense thatmay hotel here and stole 6 valuable col-, wned by J. A. —— rnd = wan mady’ that the county court ie not only principally in South America. There)iastifiable in ite present proceedures were some coins that dated back to|>"$ can not do. otherwise than to the Third century. There were aleo|®4vance the money tothe drainage some very valuable old English and Spanish coins. The burglar evident- Foes, Okla., December 11.— “Shorty” Jenkins, a butcher, became he was carried upward to a height of 4,000 feet. Several thousand people Itching, Blind, or Protrad- Pls dave te Pela aad read, you will find that the peti tioners are no longer liable for any cost incurred, and further, the costs of this improvement are divided into two accounts; first, location, which includes all the expense of making the surveys and estimates, both prelimi- nary and permanent, assessing the benefits and damages, abstracting, recording, ete.; second, construction which covers the cost of digging the main ditch, latterals the construc tion of highway bridges, farm crose properly belong in this line. You canes from the foregoing district for expenses which it ty now incurring. ‘ But leaving out the provisions of thoosand dollars which she hae ad- vanced, and approximately, three hundred thousand dollars taroed over to the county treasurer, which will then be placed in the county de- pository, the interest thereon to ac- crue to the county the same ae‘is re- can not fail to see that our bridge fand will be increased far more than Bot thie is not all; the law provides that the interest and installments on DRAINAGE EXPENDITURES. - A EELLESL LLB POEL BUTLER, MISSOURI, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1905. ln Gimes. ETE i SR ea Pa maturing, you will find that our ——e] court is making a wise loan, afterall, and {nstead of us having to build bridges for the district, it will soon JO secure the biggest crops of corn, fertilizers must be used liberally. be building them all over the county itk bd for our benefit. Apply at least 500 pounds to the acre—with s But we must not lose sight of the F . fact that there are other and greater 3% per cent. nitrogen, 8 per cent. available E considerations than these. Ourcoun- » + gag tapaha fostering and aiding phosphoric acid, and g per cent. Porasn. ¥ bo animprovement, for magnitude * cule cad lane” ten gd Porasu is a most important factor in corn e h ‘Ss come to the present and future gen- a ante re fine G “Pe are 4 erations, The greatest achiovemente| CUlture. Our practical books for farmers are " of those who have preceded them ° 1 ski P * blicatik rd pale into insignificance in comparl-| YOUTS for the as ing—ho cost or obligation & eon, It has been said that “he who 1 . : : ] ! causes two blades to apring forth} Of any sort, and a vast fund invaluable from the ground where only one grew ; ‘ : is @ benefactor to his race,” but how informat 10h im the m. much more is mankind indebted to | ss ee. those who transform into a produc: | nek Walenta: Ma ae Pe atawenack Building. tive field the thousands of acres of | —— — our low lying marsh and bog lands, ‘ ‘ ) Pe ee Ri. Ni E the one great and only blot to mar} Adjutant Quits Under Charges. | Day Laborer at 31; Died ict the face of our otherwise be vutitul Indianapolis, Dec, 11 —Jdohn R. From the Chicago Tribune Sonate, ‘ region which is now, as it Ward, Adjutant General forfadiany, Sithard Sparrow, who ae nat has been in the ages that have past, resigned on Gemand of Gov. Hanly ed a foriine after he was 50. years a breeding ground for —_ . as a result of an investigation of his = si tik ages ; yh musquitoes, a generator for death-| aecounts yorer’a wives, cied of henry disease dewting malaria in quantities beyond The investigating committee claims | W ednes ny Bs hia_home id Hs the power of human comprehension, there is # shortaye of $976.75, which Chicago. H i! Wie: (0: yeutw’ af Be fit only for the habitation of the was secnred by Gen. Ward by pad. | and beast lived in retirement for the hunteman and the angler, and caus- ding the totals on his requisitions last five veare His fortune agurry ing to spring forth from this deso- | for the pay of the 44 companies of | BA"¢# $150,000 lata Waste the fruits and the grains | the Indiana National Guard, and on| '8 Ess" Meee applied for werk in their season to sustain the teem. | warrante for supplies for the troops, | 88 laborer at the Illinois Stee! com ing husbandry, happy and prosper Gen. Ward was appointed Adju- | P8eY Hart, though 51 years of age. ous, that shall in the days now at tant-Genoral by former Gov, W, T, | He was tekea he the employ of the hand make their home within ite Durbin and was reappoiated by Gov. | COMPANY and his progress was rapid borders, and pouring its surplusinto Hanly. Gen. Ward was Adjutant of and he -oun became firet foreman. the lap of commerce, the 161st Indiana Regiment in the | 19 the meantiue he eeved bis: mon- Jou J. Manct, | Spanish-American war. of which regi. | 9; invested it {n South Chicago real f Member Drainage Commission, ment former Gov. Durbin was Colouel, | °&tte. an hy a namber of good bar- { — The shortage discovered extends | ¥8108 rapht'y —— To Ask Depew to Resign, —_| ba te Dee 8, 1903 |A Missouri Woman Albany, N. Y,, Dec. 11 —A resolu- ne Burner N.Y, ; , —_— urned { F tion requiring the resignation of] Against-Irish Emmigration. 0 Death Chauncey M. Depew as United States Sedalia, Mo, Dee. 11.—Mre, G. . senator will be introduced inthestate | Dublin, Dec. 11.—The Catholic MeKelvey of Warsaw was boiling a bishops of Ireland are making an- |, F , ] legislature the first day of the com- Pp & kettle of tea yesterday when her ing session. Somebody else may in- other attempt to stem the tide of| dress canght tire She was so badly troduce the motion, but Senator Ed. | [ish emigration. burned that sh» died four houre la- gar. Brackett announced that itall| 4 ¢lrcularstgned by Cardinal Logue | ter, Sho wns 35 years ol{ and leaves the others hesitate he will make the | 8"4 Bishop Sheeban, of tha Diocese | a husband and two children, movein order that the Republican | Waterford, has been ordered to be seid hac) party may be purged of any connec. |"@44 in the churches throughout Tried to Kill the Czar? tlon, however nebulous, with insur. | [feland, warning the y Oungergenera- | Bertin, Dev. 10 —The St. Petersburg ancescandals. The belief hereamong | 0D of the evile of emigration, ap- | .serespondeutuf the Vossichezeir i h p atofthe Vussiche Zeitung those who should know fs that Sena- | Pesling to the people not to be al-| oi ves currency ti ili Dak kate gives c y to ® rumor prevoiling tor Depew will not be required to | '” yy the enticements held forth there that an attempt on the lite of have his party serve this notice upon | '2 — from the United States,and | eh. oy sp lad been made by one of the him, but that he will voluntarily —, pie il — @raud dukes and shat the czar waa leave the Senate. path of girlemigrante. | y ounded in the right band. ~~ ~ f ~ ee ¢ a 4» « © 2 we Ce Ae ee Oe we Ow ae ae ew a & + © ’ McFarland Bros. § \The Pioneer Harness and Saddle men of Bates .ounty, 1874. rm wa | COLUMBIA OF SAyeRS AND SCOVILLE BUGGIES, K The Columbia and Sayers and Scoville vehicles have been sold for many years in Bates county, with the very best * results, Elegant in style,a grade ma- terial and skilled workmanship, our Buggies, fine Har- ees, whips and lap dusters are match- ed to sult the taste of all. - 2-7 © ee YH © oe 2 oe 8 ew ee eo nese $7.50 to trim buggy: tops Ww : Fag Sop And an elegant Flat Pad Single or Double Buggy Harness, Keep in stock everything that horse ownere need Double wagon harness from $10 5 5 . Second hand harness $3 to $15."Saddles of all et fn ene acoeieate the steel fork cow boy and sole leather spring seat saddles. Lap robes, , harness oil and soaps, liniments for man or new and repair old oves. Bring largest retail haress und saddlery store in the southwest ‘ agentsfor the Columbia and Sayer and Scoville buggies. gies, Surries, Road and Spring Wagons, |. TICFARLAND BROS., “#3 30, ‘yles and prices from the cheapest to 3 horee blaukete, dusters and fly beast, coach oils, axle grease, tents, wagon covers, in your old harness and trade them for new ones. and our harness are all made at We also t “4 {u cheaper grades. See us before baying. —or 4 e ’ 5 ‘ ec ere eh - ps - COLMAN bedi edule LESRP LEP L

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