The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, December 14, 1905, Page 4

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Lived Tools Tools as well as in better work and eae satisfaction. t is not an unusual thing for Keen Kut ter Tools to be down = toson,s0 do they last. ES ‘The long life of Keen Kutter Tools compared with the short term envio of lateciat brands es Keen Kutter Tools by far the least expensive tools that you can buy. KEEN KUTTE trademark covers every kind of tools so that you may always be sure of highest quality by insisting upon Keen Kutter Tools. An example of the Keen Kutter excellence is found in Keen Kutter Hatchets and Handled Axes. These are made of the highest grade of steel, on the most approved lines, and by the best workmen. Every Keen Kutter Hatchet and Axe has the handle wedged with the Grellner Patent Everlasting Wedge which positively prevents the head ever flying off or working loose, and is sharpened ready for use. ‘These are exclusive Keen Kutter features. ‘of the other kinds of Keen Kutter Toole are: Axes, Adzes, mers, Seton ser rota ea ERY Bay’ Ghphers tree | Shaats, Razors, ete., and Knives Fail wands.” Were nhaland we will see thet you are supplied: Every Keen Kutter Tool is sold ander this Mark and Motto: “The Recollection of Quality Remains esos. Aiur the Price is Forgotten,* SIMMONS HARDWARE COMPANY, St. Louis, U.S.A, 296 Broadway, New York, _ of the peasants which are now com- {ng in give only fuint idea of what A SLAUGHTER the world would witness should a | widespread uprising of the peasants OF OFFICERS take place, Ordinarily docile, the ©) mujik, when his passions are inflam ed, is like a wild beast and frequently turns upon those he loves bess, Russian Soldiers in Harbin, | Fraud Exposed. i K A few countefitivrs have lately Manchuria, Mutiny. been moking aud trying tosellimita ‘elaine tiows or le King’s New Discovers wel ' 7 = " for consumption, Cougls and Colds The Killing SUT Gig Ch ait other recites, thereby te wnding the public This is to wart you to beware of gach pot seck bo profit, through ater n reputation of remedies wht \ have been successtully curing die ose, for 30 years. A sure protection to you is our name ou the wrapper. Look General Upric: Feared An Attack on ihe Russe- Chinese Bank. Harbin, Maneburia (via Warsaw Russian Polind), Dee. 9 —Many offi cers here have been killed by rele) | iioustroops, Reserve otticers arenot permitted to return home. The kill | for it,ou all Dr. King's or Bucklen’s | remedies, as all others are mere mitations, HE. BUCKLEN & CO. Chicago, I, and Windsor, Canada | BERNHARDT IS WOBBED AT QUEBEC. Eggs and Other Missiles Are Thrown at French Actress and Company. POLICE WARD OFF MOBB. Qu -bee, Dee. 11 —The better classes are much chagrined over the dis- zraceful scene when Mme. sarah Bernhardt was mobbed. Bernhardt and her company left Quebec under police escort after a mob had made a vicious attack upon the French players, throwing eggs and other «nissiles. The attack was the resylt of ur- ‘ompliuenotary remarks made by Surah = Berubardt) about French ‘wondians and the influence of the clerwy. ' For the past week the Catholic clergy ia Canidae bas been preaching ainst the actress, cautioning their parishioners agaiost attending ber performances on the ground that they were immoral. The Catholic Bishop of Toronto, Canada, while she played there, adverted to her in asermon, though without mention- ing her name. Last Sunday in Quebec, in all Catholic churches, there were sermons against the actrees, One of the priests sald in the pulpit: “Some have objected to thechurch’s prohibition against attending the ac- treas’s performances on the ground that they have already bought tickets. I anewer, !f you had bought food and found {t was poisoned, would you consider yourself bound to eat it because you had bought in?” Grave Trouble Foreseen. It noeds but little foresight, to tell] ths your stomach and liver are badly affected, grave trouble is head, unless you take the proper medicine for your disease, as Mrs. John A. Young, of Clay, N. Y., did. She says: “Thad neuralgla of the liver and stomach, my heart was weakened, and Icould not est. I was very bad for a long time, but in Electrie Bitters, Lfound just what I needed, for they quickly relieved and cured me.” Best medicine for weak women. Sold under guarantee by Frank T. Clay, druggist, at 50c a tn cf officers continues. Most ofth | Weds, Spurning $100,000 Cash | bottle. eases are assassinations, but in sev. \ ecul companies the soldiers aroseand silled the offivers in btoody fights in | she barracks at in the etreste. | Owing to diiiculty in procuring funds the soldiers have not been paid | cogutarly In many cases rep nents ve received only one thine «f their vay in thiee or four vw i Nowe ached here several Gays og an outl ko ae froops, Soveral thousand met ad around te Russo Chinese bark toht wruse of weitling re’ pay accounts and refusing sub money to the army authorities | forsoldiers’ pay. Shots ware firedat | the bank and the widows were brok- en. | Provisions are scarce and expensive | and the soldiers say the ofticers are buying the worst quality of food for the men and charging the govern ment with prices for the best. The men also allege extreme cruelty on the part of the’ officers. A general mutiny is looked for here at any time. Asa majority of the army is affected and aid cannot be summon- ed short of European Russia, the troops have the, officers at their mercy. « » Warsaw, Russian Poland, Dec. 9 — The fifteenth company of the Kehe- aotm infantry regiment of the guard In garrison here has mutinied and thas demanded the dismissal of its of- ‘deers tor brutal treatment. - The eaienel has promised compliance with “the soldiers’ demands. The men do “not know whether or not to believe “Wim ond demand the dismissals at ss. Petersburg, Dec. 8 (Evening, ¢ia Eydtkotnen, Dec. 9.—16 is doubt- ‘ful whether the troops here wiil fire @pon the peasants, and as the regi- ments have been split up into small detachments and sent to thecountry itis probable that they will make commoncatee with the peasanteard murder their officers. The commander of the fortress at Bress bas notified all the land own ere in his joriediction that they must make such provisions as they canfor ~ ¢heit own protection. Owing to the bo pay Youngstown, 0, Doc, 11. —After | tearfu'ly entreating his 18 year-old adopted dang!iter, Miss Louisa Bag- nell, not to carry ont her purpose to marry William Meider, with whom she had ¢loped f-om Pittsburg, and finding itef no xvell William Bag. nel, a Pittabury etecl mean, offered he girl $100 O00 in cash naine to return to his ou hur. i Pitte- Meider is 22 years old. Doss carpou mill, He is a a Pittsburg <teel own] | Bagnell was angry when all his en- treaties aud the offer of a fortune |gelf three times iv the breast with a were spurned. He protested that the] revolver. Domestic trouble ts sup: man was practically penniless, but posed to have prompted the act. the gitlsaid that she did not care, ' that she loved him and wanted noth- ing better than life with him, what- ever it might be. When the father was shown that the young people had a perfcct legal right to be married and he could not stop the ceremony, he left, taking a train back to Pittsburg. Meider and the girl secured a license and were married by the Rev.S R. Fraser. Agonizing Burns are instantly relieved, and perfect; healed, by Bucklens Arnica Salve. é Rivenbark, Jr., of Norfolk, Va.; writes: I burnt my knee dreadfully, that it blistered all over. Bucklen’s Arnica Salve stopped the pain, and heeled it without a scar.” Also heala wounds and sores. 25¢ at Frank T. Clays, druggist. ‘ His Hanging Made Him Happy. San Quentin, Cal., Dec. 11.—Walter Waruer, 20 years old, was hanged in| 8on 5 years olj- and a daughter 2 the state prison here for the murder|years old. - ; € ASKS FORGIVENESS FOR TAKING LIFE. Young Wife Who Shoots Herself Leaves Husband Pathetic Note. Kansas City, Mo, Dee. 11.—Mre, Ros» King, 26 years old, wife of J. M. King, committed suicide in their home lust week by shooting her- | i | Do you wear | leather shoes? Selz shoes, all of them, are made of leather; this doesn’t mean part paper or cardboard; it means leather, good Jeather. | There’s one sure way to tell by the looks, if a shoe is all good leather. Look on the sole; if you find the name Selz you needn’t look for cardboard in the soles or counters; it isn’t there. Of course you can tell by wearing them, or by cutting into them; but finding Selz on the sole is much quicker and doesn’t cost anything. It saves you money. Selz Royal Blue and Perfecto shoes are best leather, best workmanship, foot comfort, durability, economy. We sell them. _ : ' He Wished He Was Dead. ; > a old, original GOV L's New York, Dec. 11 -George Geiat, | 1... opie. You know what you GO years old, a patient in the aleo- | yre taking It isironand buinine in} ' : : y Oe pt B iy trustee holic ward of Bellevue hospital, walk- | 1 tastele-# form Nocure, nopay. 500 | dllow lay Rosen bed coal sateen tb eae ed up and down the ward and ap- situated tn the county of Bates and slate of Bile- peared despondent. Suddenly hesat ‘Trustee's Sule. Whereas, E. A. Williama, a single woman. b her deed of trust dated July onl. 1901, and r cd in the ccorcer’s office within and for es county, Missouri, in book No, 148, Has Stood The Test 25 Years, Torte Order of Publication. The cast balf of the southwest quarter and the west half of the weet half of the southeast down on the side of his cot and ex- claimed: “I wish to God I were dead.” Hardly hud the words left his tongue than he fell back on bis cot, dead. This created consterna- tion among the other in:nates of the ward, and it was some minutes be fore they could be quieted. Thecause ol death was given in the report to the coroner’s Office as chronic aleo- holism, A Pension For “Lone Women.” New York, Dec. 11 —Ag a lone wo man, Mrs, Sarah Miranda Clymer, of Bridgeton, N. J., lias petitioned Con grees to grant a peusion to ‘all per- sons alone in the world when they cannot maintain themeelves.” Her petition was presented by Viee-Presi- dent Fairbanks She thinks the STATE OF MISSOURI, ) 88. County of Bates. ( In the Circuit Court, in Vacation Nov, 15, 1905. Henry Morehead, Piaintit. vs. Mary E. Morehead, Defendant. Now at this day comes the plaint!f herein, by his attorney, WU. Jackson, and files his peti- tion under oath, alles pg, among other things that defendant, Mary i. Morehead, is a non- resident of the State of Missouri; Whereupon, itis ordered by the clerk In vaca~ tion, that said defendant be novified by pub- lication that plaintiff has commended a suit | against herin this court, the objrct and gen- | eral nature of which is to obtain a deeree of divorce on the groud that (he defendant here- in having wholly dirregarded her duty as the wite of the plaintiff’ has absented herself (rom the plainti® wihout # reasonable cause lor one whole year, to wit since the —— dex of May, 1002, and that unless the said Mary E, More- quarter, all in section sixteen (16) thirty-nine (39) range twenty-nine (29); covveyance was made in trust to secure the pas ment of one certain and note fally described in said deed of trust; and whereas, default has been made in the payment of the interestof said note now past due and unpaid, Now, therefore, at the request of the { holder of eaid note and porsnant to the |- | tions of said deed of trust, I will proceed to sell | the above described premises at public | to the higheat bidder for cash, at the east door of tre court house, in the city of Butler, county of Bates and state of Missouri on Saturday, December 30th, 1905, between the hours of nine o’clock in the fore- novn and tive o’clock in the afternoon of that Gay, forthe purposes of satisfying said debt, interest and eost, #. E, HOLT, i-4 head be and anpear at this court, at the next | term thereof, to be begun and holden at the court house in the city ot Butler, in said county, on the flrat Monday in February, 1 or before the first day of plead to the peti in said will be taken as coal be rendered accordin; the same And itis farther orJe be published, accor: WEEKLY TiMkS, & NE county of Bates for publighed at least onc tion to be at least t) day of said next Febr court. J. Ae PATTERSON, Cireuit Clerk, “i, that a copy hereof Taw, in Tar Coreen andon | ed, end judgment will ; Notice of Final Settlement. Notice is hereby given to all creditors and others interesied in the estate of Caroline Freeman, deceased that 1, W. E. Walton, administrator of seid estate, intend to make inal setulement thereof, at the next term of the Bates Connty Probate Court, in Bates county, State of Missouri, to be held at Butier, Missouri, on the 13th day of November, a) | on said day or a8 soon thergsfter asIcanbe heard. And further notice given to all heirs and dis- | tributecs that J will on the i} Mrs. King’s father, A. J. Kramer, a farmer living near Harrisonville, Mo., arrived at his daughter’s home afew minutes after she died. Hehad planned the visit as a surprise for her. Mrs King left a lengthy letter to her husband. It had beencareful- ly written, and was dated Dec. 2nd. Partions of it follows: “Dear Husband: “Perhaps by the time you read this letter you will forgive me. Be kind toour little children. Now, as Ilook into their innocent faces asleep on the pillows, it looks impossible that God could let them be born to so much unhappiness and misery. F “Bat you have tofd meso many times that you would all be so much better off without me that I have come to believe it’ myself. Sol am going to, give yous chance to try Mrs. King left, beside her husband, ”’ 4 “ it |e Lith day of December, 1988, A true cop: -irctu the record’ Wit | spply to the raid court for an order of distriba- fenas) cuit Conrt Ta Oe peels eo | tion of the smount foun» to be subject to dis- pension should not be less than $39 nor more than $500 a month. tribution on seid fins! ecttlement, and foran adidas cst day of December eTERSON : order of discharge as soe soul niskrater. © * Crreast Clare bas . SCABTORIA. 6-4 ©. M, BARKLEY, D.C. 43t Administrator. Beare the ba Kind You Have Always Bought ‘ Held For Wife’s Murder. McKenzie, Tenn., Dec. 11.— William A. Beard, & prominent citizen of the Blanche community, is under arrest, charged with the murder of his wife. She was found dead in a buggy, which her husband occupied on their = This return from town. His story was N shows that when.in a dene wood some one the . halted the horse, and pulling a pistol, ra eis ven t shot his wife, killing her instantly, IB. Avent repre: Thé.coroner’s jury held him to be ee pes . 4 responstble. No cause.can beassign- MUTUAL Uh ed for the deed, as there lied never Y sewer “ue been any t#ouble between the couple. ~INSTRAME CO. fe ry ; oat Newark, N. J. climb- $ Sh Arkansas itor “has come-to / py to proeperity. He fs ? roi pruad of his culupany “and.” 7terecord. Sagacious jen putts” in Ble them and has ing schedule . } + 42°

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