The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, August 2, 1906, Page 5

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MINOR NEWS ITEMS. TORTURED BY |e PRN OY KHERGROUND Ci Kiev, Russia ‘have been destroyed "| fre involving a loss of $1,500,000. The encampment of regulars and Full Text ofthe Document Adopted | aational guard at Chickamauga Na- by the Outlawed Russian | tional park opened formally Monday. Parliament. H. H. Weakley, pulisher of the The Appeal Declares the Country ts Di- vided in two Parts, the People on One Side dnd Their Oppressors on the Other Defend Their Brothers, St. Petersburg, July 30.—The full text of the appeal to the army and navy adopted July 27 by the radical groups. of the outlawed parliament, in conjunction with the central commit- tees of the proleteralt organizations, is as follows: “Soldiers and Sailors: The govern- ment has by imperial command dis- solved parliament and troops have been assembled from all sides to op- Traffic over the Mount Cents rail- | press the people by armed force. The road, interrupted by the recent cloud- | peoples’ representatives were elected burst has been entirely re-established. | from among your fathers and brothers The Hill trunk company’s plant at/in order to lay before the emperor Nashville, Tenn., was gutted by fire! the needs of the people and to obtain Monday. land and liberty. But the emperor Representative David A. DeArmond | Would not listen to the elected of th: of Butler, Mo., was Saturday renom-| People. He hearkened to his former inated by the democrats of the sixth | Councillors, the grand dukes, minis- congressional district. This was the] tefs, generals and the wealtMest 0: ninth consecutive time Mr, DeArmond | the land owners, who did not want has received the nomination without!‘ sive up their lands, their proper- opposition. ties, their emoluments (amounting to many thousands of roubles) and their irresponsible power. Russia is now divided into two parts. One side is Vincennes, Ind., July 20.—Two work- the vast majority, all the peasants and itl bord 5 eas eb workmen, all the poor and oppressed, the best educated and the most en- boller at the plant of the Vincennes lightened citizens, the soldiers, who paper mill company Monday. The} seg the most clearly, the best officers property loss 1s $15,000, Of the im-} 154 an the martyrs in the jatls In- jured the worst hurt ts Charles Con-| ciuding many thousands of soldiers oo bid eo gear g ph se and sailors, On the other tte is : x of oppressors, such as through the roof of the boiler house, Aone yp a Ml be and the Man- snr Poni cadet Ae hag Boge churian generals, who ran away from age ie arrison 4 n, ne: w fire on the William Henry Harrison, when he was pre By clay os fie Ag governor of the northwest territory./ nita the petty government officials, the police sples and the whole Black Hundred and these rely on your strength to beat down the whole Rus- slan people, Will you shoot the peo- en *h / ple, shed the blood of the people and uy market steady to 1c low CAS TORIA ae oe tive steers $3.90@6.15; southern steers tranafix the peoples’ breasts with bay ~ _ For Infants and Children. Git; southern’ cows. $2,003.40; native | Onets? Remember that you are the The Kind You Have Always Bought cows and heifers $2.0095.0; stockers and| children of peasants, that you are feoders $2.25@4.50; buils $2.25@4.00; calves] the children of the Russian people, rt ar we s2.000438. $3.50G5.90; | and that at the same time tn the vil- Witoes snacetate 1000; ? ket 5@10c low- | ages where you were born your own er; bulk of sales 36.456 .52%; heavy $6.40! brothers who are remaining home are @8.4M%; packers $6,456.52; pige and ight} also agitating, are also demanding antes austin 6,000; market steady; land and liberty and that the govern- muttons #4.2505.50; lambs $5.5097.50; range | Ment 1s sending other troops to shoot wethers $4.35@6.75; stockers and feeders| and beat them. Why will you defend $4.00@6.00. the government? Do you yourselves live so well? Are not you yourselves in a state of servitude? You are in 600; toseket beat steady: others 100 low. | 8 Woree state of bondage than all the . < 33.7¥a8.40; cows and heifers others. You are given slavish em $1.25@5.20; stockers and feeders $2.50@| ployment as officers servants, you are Texans $4.0075.00; calves $5.0007.00. | tormented in discipline battalions, for wap rateagaend oe iy pail it eh Ne every free word you are sent to hard 7; rough heavy] labor or shot. We, the representa ; pigs $5.0506.00; | tives of the people, wished to promul- gate Jaws providing for a reduction of the term of military service to two nie years, the abolition of soldiers’ em- ployment as servants, for the pay- ment of a monthly wage to soldiers and the effective prevention of all in- sults to the rank and file by those placed over them. We wished to im- prove the lot of the soldiers, but the 560% ackers great alm before us was to improve Hy Taka Rae gisele the lot of the whole working popula- Sheep—Receipts 2,500; market steady;| tion. To prevent all this the govern- SOSTHEOPATHY J natives ss.0005.50; lambs #.00g7.50. ment hastened to dissolve parliament, “Sailors and Seamén, we, the legally Eczema Broke Out Also on Hands Evening Herald and one of the well a and Limbs — Suffering Intense— {known newspaper men of Ohio “died STRONG ARRAIGNMENT OF GOVERNMENT Doctors Said Too Old to Be Monday t his home in Dayton, aged $ Idi 69 years. Cured — An Old ler of 80 The crusier Washington; built at Years Declares: the yards of the New York Shipbulld- ing company in Camden, N. J., was - formally turned over to the govern é ' CUTICURA TREATMENT ment Monday. sai 4 J BLESSING” Fire completely destroyed four brick buildings and four stocks of merchandise at Plattsburg, Mo., Sun- vila art he mt Ge | 7,744, neeence te It sa me from worse than covered by insurance. the to tortures rot hades, about the year | The rumor in circulation Sunday 1000, with itching on my scalp and laight that Gen. Trepoff had been as- I =" conthen it sassinated turns out to be as baseless as the report to the same effect which was current early last week. Paper Mill Boller Explodes, MARKET REPORTS. Kanana City Live Stock. Kansas City, July ®.—Cattle—Recetpts DR. E. N. CHASTAIN. Butter, - Mo, Office over Bennett-Wheeler Mer, Co, Residence High Street. Office Phone 213, Residence Phone 195. Chicago Live Stock. Chicago, July %0.—Cattle—Receipts %,- DR. H. M. CANNON, Dentist, BUTLER, - MISSOURI. Will bein Adrian every Tues- day and Friday prepared to do all kinds of dental work. ; market steady; St. Louts Live Stock. St. Louis, July 90.—Cattle—Recelpts 7,- 000; market lower; beef steers $3,500.20; stockers and feede 2.00714.00; cows d heifers $2.25@6. Texas steers $3.00@6.00; cows and heifer: HA. 25. Hogs—Receipts 5,000; market 1c lower; Farmers Bank Building, ae Butler, Missouri, i po ay Live Stock. a elected representatives of the peas- Omal uly %.—Cattle—Receipts 5, ; DR JOHN A BELL 000; market generally 10c lower; native an ee eee yo nebo ty . 9 steers $1.25@6.25; cows and heifers $3.00@| that wit out parliament the go 4.25; western steers $3.50@5.10; cows and| ment is fllegal. Orders which it may SUCCESSOR TO heifers $2,0@4.00; canners _$1.50@2.75; | now issue have no legal force. We pee ‘and feeders §2.75@4.00; cone call on you, $3,00@5.50; bulls and stags $2.25@M. " DR. HARRIET FREDERICK. Hogs—Receipts 5,500; market 10c lower;| “Firstly, to cease to obey the illegal bat heavy $8.25@6.4; mixed %.90@6.45; light | government and to actively oppose it $6.1506.50; pigs $%.5066.25; bulk of sales/i, oniunction with us and the whole T. C. BOULWARE, Tate inhetihe 9,000; market ven of the poor population. You have Physician . Office | yearlings %.25@5.75; wethers %4.0@6.00; |taken an oath to defend the father- Novah Bide Seuss, ction. Moe ewes HOLE; lambs H-26G7-2 land. Stand beside us for land and Disedses of women and children liberty. @ specialty. Kansas City Grain. “Secondly, any man who shoots at FES co 2) RUE Se a a ony gf gpa dine ha, the people is a criminal, a traitor and le lower; Sept. S4@6s%; args Hid the enemy of the people. DR- J. M. CHRISTY, Peg nay or tg No 4 od “We inform all such, in the name Ottee The Over and Children » Specialty | Corn—%c Jower; Sept. 474; Dee. h | of their fathers and brothers that they Office The Over Butler Cash Depart-|No. 2 mixed 4%; No. 3 19@49%; No. 2] wilt not be allowed to return to their mont Store, Butler, Mo, f homes and that over their names will | Dalee Telephone 0. House Telephonel0, hang the eternal curse of the peo- ple. JETER, Caen (Caah Grate. “Thirdly, the government entered ea Diaper Tustice, reantinra Nord red TMOG: No. H into negotiations with the Austrian One H. H, Nichols, hard 734@75; No. 3 hard’ 124@74; No. 1 and German emperors and German bbe errs RQ; aor 2 northern 76%@77%; |troops are ready to invade our coun- Best side square, Butler, Mo. | x try to defend the government which aim: No oro Oate—No. 2 8; No. 8 tures—Close—Wheat—July 734; yc U%@U4%. Corn—July 51; Sept. Oats—July 33; Sept. 32%. St. Louis Cash Grain. St. Louis, July Lope amethyst | er No. 2 2 red cash sagrates 9 TK; track 2pposes the people, with the power of foreign arms. “By suck negotiations, we. declare the government has betrayed the country and is now outside the limits ow the law. “Soldiers and Sailors, your sacred ; |Juty ts to free the Russian people ‘rom the treacherous government and , parliament. Every man fall- this holy ‘war will cover him- Jewish Orphans to America. Zlemterg, Australia, July 30.—A committee of Jews, ~Tepreseuting ONE OF THE GREAT SIGHTS OF | Frankfort and other German cities, Surely the most wonderful sight it ts possible to witness Is the under- ground world, hewn out of solid rock out-of-the-way trav- eler will be amazed to come across in the obscure little Polish-Austrian town of Wieliczka, five miles or so from Cracow, and the principal cen- ter of the salt industry of Galacia. The mines are directly controlled by the Austro-Hungarian minister finance, through whom one must ob- tain permission to enter the salt cities for, for some unexplained reason, the salt is looked upon as so much gold, even though this whole subterranean world is made of it. these salt mines goes back as far as the eleventh century, and they are miles upon miles in length and contain hundreds of miles of streets. The entrance is hardly fairylike or wonderful, consisting of a long, low building above ground, containing the offices of the administration, One goes down nowadays by an ordl- nary lift, the old horse-power concern being a thing of the past. The present writer, however, since time was no ob- ject, preferred to go down still more gradually by means of the great zig- zag staircase hewn in the salt. first sensation on reaching one or the other of the vast chambers is one al- most of terror at the vastness of the saloons, the thick darkness, and the —Soldiers and Sailors are Called on to) Salt, Which the AUSTRIA. Hewn Out of Solid Rock Salt—Of Ancient Origin—Take Weeks to Visit All the Won- ders. sombre echoes. One of the first sights shown fn the great city is the enormous expanse of the Letow ballroom, which is lit up for the visitor's benefit !f he chooses to pay a few shillings. This enormous ballroom dates back to the early part of the eighteenth century, and is named after Herr Le- towski, the then director of the Ga- lacian salt mines. T asked, as we left the ballroom, how far we were from the surface of the earth, “About 220 feet,” my guide replied. “And this tler is the first of the sev- en cities of our underground world of salt.” But only three of theee levels are opened to visitors. The salt of this subterranean world js curiously durable, as may be seen from the fact that the great chande- Hers, though composed of mere strings of salt crystals, have yet endured for centuries without melting or wearing out in any way. In most caverns the guides use Ben- gal-lights, so that the loftier features the saloons, chapels and streets To visit the second “city” of this strange world, one de scends yet lower by a long series of staircases hewn {!n the salt. ly, as one nears the bottom, the colos- chamber looms of may be seen. sal tery. 40 “Michaelowice” A RAILWAL STATION OF SALT, vaguely, with all its appalling mys- 120 feet high. Having seen this chamber we enter some smaller saloons, each named after some distinguished personage. The third tier, or “city,” of this strange place contains the railway station and an admirable restaurant. “At this railway station,” my guide told me, “some five-and-twenty miles of lines from all parts of the mines meet. We keep the restaurant open all through the summer for the bene fit of tourists from Austria, Hungary, Poland, Russia and Germany whe come to see us.” As I have said, it would take a vis- itor weeks adequately to inspect this strange city or series of cities. The boat, or barge—one of the few institutions of . this strange which is not made of salt—is guided through the various caverns by ropes and pulleys, and the “captain” steers with his feet on another rope. “There are 15 or 16 of these lakes in varioug parts of the mine,” I was told, “but this is the only one which we allow visitors to navigate, for salt masses are apt to drop from the roofs of some of the others.” In about 20 minutes we had com- pleted our tour of the lake. Then a startling thing occurred. Turning quickly, my guide shot off his revolver, with truly startling ef- I theught the reverberating echoes would never cease, so repeated and repeated were they, each repetition and more remote, until at length the multiplied sounds died away in the immense distance and im- "esr ness, rae oa growing wiore there are upwards of The record of The Gradual- It was finished some time in the eighteenth century, as a result of or 50 years of labor. This vast apartment is about 100 feet broad and world arrived here from Russia with about 100 children, who have been made orphans recently as the result of an- other Jewish outbreak in various places. After a few days’ rest the party will proceed to Germany, where the children will be divided between the United States and England. The Jewish Ald society of Lemberg Russia, which is working on funds subscribed largely in the United States, iscaring for the orphans. Among the arrivals were six orphans of Ainstein, a teacher, who with his wife was murdered at Bialystok. SCASBSTORIA. Bears the sha Kind You Have Always Bought BU Capttal successful experience, Wu. E. Watton, President. Da. T. C. Boutware, Vice-Pres. Columbia, Sayers & Scoville Vehicles in car lute and are prepared vo meet competi- tion with any factury or catalogue house on ode of uur Cinee. Alt we ask is a show. Come in and spend 30 minutes investig .ting then buy where your money goes fartherest.| . McFARLAND & SONS. SCOCEEIOSCHMMEEEIOOCEEEIOSSS We wae | MISSOURI STATE BANK, | | BUTLER, MISSOURI. Surplus Fund and Profits Receives deposits and always has money to loan, 25 years Te Cure a Cold in One Day. Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUI NINE Tablets. All druggists refund the money if it fails to enre. E. W- Grove’s signatareis oneach box. 25 Mo. Pac. Excursion Rates. Homeseekers Excursions. Rate one fare plus $2.00 for round trip. Tickets on sale lst and 3rd Iuesdays of each month, except that rates to Denver, Pueblo, Colorado Springs and Trinidad, Colo,, will be one fare plus $5.50. Tickets limited to 21 days from date of sale. For points to which tickets may be sold call at depot or phone 27. Special round trip rate to Kansas City $2.15 on sale Saturday of each week. All trains leaving Butler alter twelve o'clock noon and all trains on Sunday, good to return on any train leaving Kansas City before, noon the following Monday J F, Geieer, Agent. ISSSSS McFARLAND & & SONS | have the largest harness factory in the South- weat, buy best onk leather «direct from the Tanner. Manufacture their harness at home and eell to the consumer with a guarantee, 655,000.00 12,708 48 : — DIRECTORS :;— Dr. T. C, Boulware, J. R, Jenkins, Trank M, Voris. John Deerwester A. B, Owen, Wn. E, Walton Dr. J. M, Christy ©. R, Radford, Max Weiner 0. H. Dutcher B. P. Poweli Ww B Tyler Sam Levy WE WANT YOUR BUSINESS, J. R. Jennrya, Cashier. Wes ery Denon, Ase’t Cashier. CorbLy Gararp, Clerk and Bookkeeper. - TIME DEPOSITS. Ww. E. Walton, Pres, Fank Allen, Seo - THE WALTON TRUST CO. OF BUTLER, MO, ' Always has ready money on hand to loan on farms in Bates, i Vernon, Barton, Cedar, Polk and Dade Counties, Mo., at VERY LOWEST RATES OF INTEREST on one, three, five or seven years time, and allow borrowers to pay back part each year if desired, Every land owner wanting a loan should call and get our rates and liberal terms, Money ready as soon as papers are signed. Wehave a full and complete abstract of title to every aore of land or town lot in Bates County from the U. 8 patent and showing all deeds of trust, Sheriff's deeds, tax titles or other conveyances that have been recorded in Bates county. Our Abstract books were begun by our Mr, Wm. E, Wal- ton 85 years ago and are written up daily from the county reo- orde, We furnish reliable Abstracts at reasonable prices and are responsible for their correctness, INTEREST PAID ON | If you have idle money for six months or longer the Walton Trust Company will pay you interest on it, Sam Levy. Vice-Pres, C. A. Allen, Ass’t Seo, A. A. Peach, Clerk and Bookkeeper W, D. Yates Abstractor, Wz. J, Nix, Clerk, eR | THE BATES NATIONAL BANK. BUTLER, MISSOURLS Capital $50,000, - - Surplus, $6,000.{ Has Stood The pie 25 Years

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