The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, December 28, 1905, Page 8

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If you will eat more UneedaBiscui you can do more work, enabling you to earn more money, so that you can buy more Uneeda Biscuit do more work and earn still »zove money. ¢ NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY Pe, «Jot rae ee RRL fate erent rn inne aI ABI IEA AGENCE RABE SIN Wie. entre scriidhtmicinsnticneaibbion ee OE toned to Death, " ke D Carrie finisher, died, and so inconsolable M is frightened t ait was the poor lady thav she spent ae ae Pane ‘ $3,500 on a grauite shaft, inscribinig ; : " 7 ndacitinieat on the base thereof: eh ‘ \ urther sub “My grief is so great that I can-)‘ was in i shoppit ‘ a t t the ad- |} not bear it,’ Several buys ¢ io her and exe |! n ce jor ordering” “Beforea year had passed, how plod t lo. : ; , nenis Of ID) ever, her grief had sutficiently faded frightened and tried to break awa : prpernid Mes of fleld artil- | 64 allow her to marry a young glove another horse hitched to a porch y lery to the Philippines is a fear of a}, ' jerked t rch down, ‘The girl fel) | Kenoral ar gu outbreak through- atitcher, to the bottom of the wagon, dead, | Wt China was obiained Saturday, The; “She sent a stonecutter to the There was no mark of violence upon | PMliciais of (he government admit that | cemetery afew days before the wed her avd the physicians said death was | the situation in China is serious, even | ging, and caused him to add to the due to a stoppage of the heart, caused | Mere so than during the period lead- inscription on the shaft the single by fright. ing up to the boxer outbreak in 1900. Z iinet | In e there is a general uprising it word: Wathena, Kan, Merch Stabbea. | may be necessary for the powers to| ‘ ‘Alone,’” Wathena, Kan., Dec. 25,.—Because | again throw troops into China to pro- _eeeneeents John Sehalz » merchant of this place, | tect foreign lives and property. Grave Trouble Foreseen, told Edward Morris, a farmer, when The antiforeign feeling is apparently It needs but little foresight, to tell the latter inquired the price of a pair | more general now than ever before. that when your stomach ‘and liver of shoes and then complained that it | The boycott of American goods did are badly alfected, grave trouble {s was exorbitant that “those shoes are | More than serve the purpose of those ahead, unless you take the proper much foo good for vou to wear.” Schalz | Who originated it, Primarily, it was | medicine for your disease, as Mrs. was stabbed to the heart with a pocket- | conceived to. bring this government John A. Youn; , of Clay, N. Y., did. kinfe.. The stabbing was on the thresh. | to terms on the question of the ex- She says: “] faa neuralgia of the - old of the store, in front of a half hun- | clusion of Chinese from this country. liver and stomach, my eart was AB dred horrified Christmas shoppers, Sat- | The president was anxious over the weakened, and Icould not eat. I : urday night, Schalz leaves a wife and | situation, and it has since been said was very bad for a long time, but in 9 eight small children, Morris, who is that he stretched the law to a consid- Electric Bitters, I foun just what I * in jail, has a family of six. erable degrée in taking the steps he needed, for they quickly relieved and A , Ms Seer tree did, ? cured me.” Best medicine for weak cS 2 OTH Us nder Dend. Instead of alleviating conditions tne | women. Sold under guarantee by ue Grass Valley, Cal., Dec. 25—Mrs. A.| modification of the rules and regula-| Frank T. Clay, druggist, at 50c a a B. Dibble who was the first president of | tions of the immigration service | po¢tle. y the Women’s Christian Temperance’ seemed for a time to make the situa- union, who with Frances Willard,! tion worse. founded that organization, and one of the early settlers in this state, died at her home in this city Sunday after a long illness. Later the movement, on the surface at least, disappeared for a time, only to break out !n a far more virulent form in Shanghai. An lowa Preach- er’s Advertisement. Eldora, Ia., Letter to the St. Paul Dispatch. The Rev T. J. O’Connor, pastor of the First Christian church here, be- Heves in modern methods of adver- tising, andin an endeavor to increase the size of his congregation inserts the following in the local papers, for which he insists upon paying the re- gular space rates: “Eternal Life Insurance Company. “Home Office, Heavenly City, New Jerusalem. “President, the Lord Jesus. “Capital, God’s Everlasting Love. “] am one of the many representa- tives of this great company in this community, and will be glad to have youcallon me at the Church of Christ on the Lord’s Day at 11a. m. and 7:30 p. m., or at my home any time through the week. “The firm assures you peace and joy here and in the next world.” Former U, S, Senator Injured. San Francisco, Dec. 25.—Former United States Senator Bard was seri- ously injured Saturday in a runaway accident near Oxnatd. He was thrown from his buggy into a ditch, sustain- ing a dislocation of his left hip. HEAD SOLID SORE Awful Suffering of Baby and Sleepless Nights of Mother. CURED BY CUTICURA Skin Fair as a Lily with no Scar to Recall Awful Sore Writes Mother. “T herewith write out in full the be ginning and end of that terrible disease eczema,’’ says Mrs, Wm. Ryer, Elk River, Minn., “which caused my babe untold suffering and myself many sleepless nights. My babe was born seemingly a fair, healthy child, but when she was three weeks old a swell- ing appeared on the back of her head, and in course of time broke. It did not heal but grew worse, and the sore 8B from the size of a dime to that ofadoliar, I used all kinds of reme- dies that I could think of, but nothing seemed tohelp; in fact, it grew worse. CHRISTMAS IN [THE NAVY. Officers and Men of Uncle Sam's War Vessels Enjoy a Holiday No Matter Where Stationed. Washington, Dec. 25.—Aboard the ships of the American navy scattered in foreign and home waters, Monday was observed as a holiday, The Christ- mas greeting sent around the world by Admiral Dewey will be communicated to the officers and men of all the ves- » gels in the service that can be reached, On the ships the only work required is the necessary cleaning, and by 9 o’- lock most of the officers and men were ) left free to celebrate the day as they chose. Liberal shore leaves were gianted according to the custom and as many as can be spared from a ehip will celebrate ashore. Thcusands of pounds of turkey, cranberries and plum pudding and other things that mak? up the Christmas dinne: aboard the vessels were laid by and served in generous fashion on board eact. ship. The men bad thei> Christmas dinner at noon and the officers in tie evening. On many ships the captain wag in- vited so dine in the ward rocin and join the officers in making merry. Fight Will Be Bitter. Those who will persist in cl their ears inst the continua! recommendation of Dr. King’s New Discovery for Consumption, will have a | and bitter fight with their troubles, if not ended earlier by fatal termination. Read what T. R. “Last fall my every sym tom of consumption. She took De. very after every- TO FORCE LEADERS OUT. Reform Element of the Mutual Life Insurance Company Have a Plan to Retire President Peabody. New York, Dec. 25.—As a result of the exposure before the Armstrong in- vestigating committee of the Lawyers’ Mortgage stock scandal, which in- volves the men in the Mutua] Life who forced the election of Charles A. Peabody as president, the reform ele- cured her. Guaranteed by Frank 1 oy, Brg. Price 50c and $1. Trias 4 Her hair fell out where the sore was, | ment ju the company has taken a new —_———_ d I feared it would e ‘ rentinnet nvclinpaged Gaver Some | ‘86k st the preseng plan is carried out | Widow Shoots Kentucky Farmer & meeting of the trustees, scheduled for on a visit, and when he saw the next Wed tesday, may he told me to get Cuticura Fmd | eee, apy ee Sieh tana tional killing occurred at 9 o'clock into re- Ointment right away. tirement a number of multimillionaires “To please him I did so, and to my | who for .1xny years have been con- | this morning on the Pryorfarm near cae she the Sees nee e> spicuous in the affairs of the Mutual. | this clty on the Benton road. Mrs. ji at oe pee nee ee The plan is to call upon every man | Ella Gholson, widow of Will Gh { ee a itie os niily, and che hee me | %0 Fetire who took as hie individual | about 30 years old, shot and scar left to recall that awful sore, and investment the sha.es of stock of che | William Pryor, 57, a prominent it is over cight months and no sign of | Lawyers’ Mortz:<e company intended | farmer. low wunted a big tree cut down and Pryor ordered her not to have it cut. Yeaterdi for the Mutual iife. its returning.” Her Amendment. From the New Yérk Tribune. Congresaman W.- Bourke Cockran was narrating, in Ban Francisco, his experience in the Far East, ~ “Bat we made the best of t,” he Pent serene ogy “We were \LOS ANGELES HOTEL BURNS Guests Hurried from Building With- » out Saving Personal Belongings —Loss Estimated at $200,000. Los Angeles, Cal., Dec. 25.—In the largest hotel fire in the history of Los Angeles the Van Nuys Broadway hotel, one of the first-class hostelries of the city, located at 412-422 South Broad- way, in the heart of the business dis- trict, was almost completely destroyed Sunday. One hundred and ten guests, most of whom were still in bed at the time the fire broke out, escaped in their scant clothing to the street.. Many of them got out in their night robes, and praetically all suffered the losg of their entire baggage and per- sonal effects, Five firemen were in- jured during the progress of the flames by the collapse of the rear of the sec- ond floor. They were precipitated in- to the basement and all suffered more or less serious injuries. Fire Chief Lips was also severely cut by broken glass but had his injuries dressed without leaving the scene of the fire. The total financial loss will approximate about $200,000, Martz estate and August Winstel, owners of the hotel building will lose $100,000, insurance $75,000, Very few of the guests were able to vet out any of their effects, T. H. Benton, ex-state auditor of Nebraska, wife and daughter occupied rooms on the fourth floor and barely . losing all thetr estimated at —— Yoo Drops} Aperfect Remedy for Constipa- fion, Sour Stouiich, Diarrheen Worms Convulsions, Feverish- ness and LOSS OF SLEEP. Fac Simile Signature of ; | > and money, For Over Thirty Years SCASTORE ‘THE OENTAUR COMPANY. NEW YORK CITY, | Mrs. P. Hanisch of Chicago escaped from her room on the fourth floor, but lued at $4,000, Several lost heavi in from $25 to $2,000, fire has v duals 3 ranging origin of t nitely ascertained, Ut ered by Night Clerk Harry 6:55 o'clock, CANAL WORK BY CONTRACT All Excavation Except the Culebra Cut May be Maced with Private Parties, De —Chief Pana- ma Canal Engin now in this country, will be in hington this week, The primary object of his coming from the isthmus is to aid in determining what type of canal shall be built, When Chief Engineer Wallace was in charge he gave a good deal of time to Washington, considering the question of building the canal, or, at least, portions of it, It was reported by him by contract. to Secretary Taft that, if advisable, 1 the entire project might be built by Capital, - + = $50,000 contract, with the exception of the ex- Surplus and Profit - 14,628 cavation work in Culebra cut, which, on account of its greatness, would probably have to be constructed by Transacts a general banking business. Extends every accommodation consistent with safe and sound banking. the government, He believed it would DIRECTORS, be with only great difficulty that a private concern could be procured to E. A. BENNETT, Jos. M. McKissen, undertake the work at the Culebra Cuark Wix, J.J. McKee, cut. Mr. Taft has also thought*about J. W. Cooare, O. A. Hentz, the matter, and it is understood that, to some degree, if not entirely, it might be the most feasible plan to let the contracts for large sections of the work. It is the belief of many here that, when the present controversy has ended, the administration, acting’ on its own initiative, or in compliance with a law of congress, will build the waterway under private contract, with a commission to supervise and to solve the engineering problems, Frank Hotianp, W. F. Duvau. F. N. Drennon, The names in our directory are a sufficient guarantee ; that your interests will be safely guarded. WE WANT YOUR BUSINESS, Socialist Denounced President. Philadeiphia, Dec. 25.-—a policeman Sunday threatened to stop a meeting vf socialists who had gathered in a lo- eal theater to “protest against the massacres of Jews in Russia” if the speakers persited in denouncing Pres- ident Roosevelt and his administra- tion. Ben Hanford, of New York, the vice presidential candidate on the so- cialist ticket in 1904, was speaking! when the interruption came. He had been denouncing the Russian govern- ment and was in the midst of a tirade against the president and “other agents in this country of the czar.” The po- liceman on duty at the theater be- lieved his remarks justified him in warning Hanford to desist. FARM LOANS, © To be able to borrow money on real estate on long time, with the privilege of making payments before due, is an advan- tage which the frugal borrower appre- ciates, We loan money in this way and at a low rate of interest. UVALL & PERCIVAL, | BUTLER, MO. } D Italians and Negroes at War. Chicago, Dec. 25.—In a race riot be- tween Italians and negroes at Eigh- teenth and Dearborn streets Sunday night two Italians were shot and se- verely injured and one colored: man wag stabbed but not fatally injured. The police of the Twenty-second street station after ifberal use‘of their clubs on the heads of both factions fored peace between them. As a result of the riot, which lasted for more than |’ 20 minutes and in which more than 300 people participated, both races are on the alert and the police fear a re- newal of the fight. Cable Stn@ Lived on Cocoansts. Victoria, B. C., Dec. 25.—The steam- er Miowera, which arrived Saturday ~ WE WANT YOUR GRAIN and will pay the highest m: price any time you haul Whether a or,small one, we can! ‘ + a chance: bid,on your We will eave you money.

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