The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, August 30, 1906, Page 4

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inline entail BACK IN THE OLD RUT. fi. - a // OT 4 PARDON FOR TASURCENTS Cuba Offers Unconditional Amnesty to Those Who Have Taken Up Arms Against Her. A STATEMENT BY PRESIDENT PALMA Declares the Present Insurrection Only a Crary Movement on the Part of Dis- contented Persons, and That There is No Moral Reason for It—Will Welcome Repentant Rebels, Havana, Aug. 27.—The striking fea- ture of the situation Monday was the announcement that will unconditionally pardon all those who have taken up arms against the government excepting captured com- manders and “these also will be par- doned if they surrender with their full commands and arms. This order which was issued by Acting Secretary of the Interior Montalvo, by direction of the president, followed an informal Btatement made by the prestdent and containing a partial intimation of the | Bame thing. The palace authorities firmly expect that it will result in the bulk of the insurgents returning home, No tiie has been fixed as a limit for the sur- renders of insurgents to be accepied. The government officials here were more cheerful than usual Monday. In the province of Havana ihe sit- uation is no better than it has been for The government's are still busily engaged in har- the insurgents. In the province the last three days. troops evidently badly scattered as a result of the operations of the government forces. Leading sympathizers with the revolt here are beginning to show badly suppressed signs of discourage- | ment A party of insurgents commanded by Col, Sanchez entered the town of Bejucal, province of Havana, -at 11 o'clock Sunday night, fortified them- selves and fought all night against an attacking force of government re- eruits and rural guards without any other result than three of the defend- ers of the place and one rural guard being killed. President Palma’s Statement. Havana, Aug. 27.—President Palma Monday gave out a statement in which he says that the insurrection has no fdeals and no programme and that the cries which the insurgents raised do not constitute a programme, ideals or a justification for the movement, Continuing, the president says: “All revolutionists must have a pro- gramme, as had our revolution for in- dependence in 1895. Everybody at that time knew that the Cubans had Tevolted against Spain and had en- Saged in an open fight for the liberty ef their country. The present move- ment is more of a local adventure— only a crazy movement on the part of discontented persons, There is no moral reason for it. The government eould suspend the constitutional guar- antees but it prefers to maintain the vigor and hope of the people and avoid possible excesses. “The medical force has been in- structed to attend to all prisoners and to give wounded or sick insurgents Bryan’s Philippines Policy. Mr. Bryan's {usistence upon un- loading the burdens and cutting loose from the entanglements {nci- Assassination of Two Generals Fok , Strenuous Programme Mapped Out | gent to our possession sud control lows Attempt on Life of Rus- for Democratic Leader on His of the Philippines is in full accord sian Premier. Arrival at New York. with the anti{mperialiem of the Democratic platform of 1900. That was declared to be the paramount iseue of bis candidacy in the Presi- dential campaign of that year. In one of his letters from the Phil ippines, printed fn the Republic some months ago, Mr. Bryan fully out bi HOR COTS KL? al BUST THE GOV. GENERAL OF WARSAW SLAIN | EXPECTED TO MAKE SEVERAL SPEECHES Gen, Von Liartiarski Shot While Driving— | grain Meeting Will be Held in Madison Emperor's Suite, Killed by a Woman so be Asked to Address Overfiow Meet- on the Station Platform at Peterhof— ings—Nebraska Delegation First to Ar- rive in New York. ANFUL PSUR 35 VRS Terrible Scaly Humor in Patches All Over the Body—Skin Cracked and Bleeding—Itching Unbear- able—Cured by Cuticura in Thirty Days at Cost of $4.75, ANOTHER WONDERFUL the government | nta Clara the insurgent bands are | Attempt to Kill aren Stahl. Warsaw, Aug. 27.—Gen. Von Liarllar ski acting military governor general of Warsaw was shot and killed at two o'clock Monday afternoon, while driv- ing in a cab. The assassin escaped. Saturday morning an upknown man warned the cab men of this city, gen- erally, not to drive any of the gener- als, Gen, Von Liarski was the command- er or the Fifth army corp stationed at Warsaw, Gen. Von Liarliarski was driving in a carriage from the commandant’s Office to his residence, Ag the generals driver slackened speed at a place where the street was torn up for re — = unknown young man fired ‘our shots at Von Liarliarski th tents were always extant, Itbetng!m-|the top of the carriage, pollen =: possible to find publie positions for | bullets entering the generals breast everyone, To compromise with the | under the heart. The coachman whip- disturbers now would result in further | ped up his horses and drove at full |disturbance every few years. Sup-jspeed to the hospital, where the pressing the imsurgents now will for} general died almost instantly. Von ever more guarantee the stability of | Liarifarsk! had only recently been ap- \the Cuban institutions, while dicker- | pointed acting military governor of Ing with them would expose the | this city, {country to another disturbance of the einen ‘ | peace {a the near future. St. Petersburg, Aug 27.— A report “This is my first resolution,” Pres- reached here late Monday afternoon ident Palma declared. “And I shall | that Col. Rieman, of the Seminovsky maintain It at the cost of my Hfe. I | Guard regiment, has been assassinated ‘anderstand my duties and responsibil. |@t Luga, where he stopped while on ities to the people. Such fs the only | his way to Warsaw to take up a po- method of defending Cuba’s institu-| ition on the staff of Gen. Skallon, ; tions and civilization.” governor general of Warsaw. The re- | Port has not yet been confirmed, though four officers of the Sem!novsky regiment are said to have left St. Pet- | Authorities at Ellice Ialand Decides to |¢™Dburg to {dentify the body. Deport Children of Murdered Saturday's unsuccessful attempt on Russian Jews = Mfe of Premier Stolypin, with P —<oee ts sickening, useless slaught f $2 New York, Aug. 27.—The case of eter o! jthe 40 Russian Hebrew children te pantie Sunday night who arrived here Saturday on the | 2) 4 ae, bh lutionary outrage in jsteamship Amerika * was heard by oe - nm, commander of the |the board of special inquiry at the |* ovsky guard regiment, and who since his promotion to be a general {immigration station on Ellis island | Sunday and the board after deliber hag been attached as a personal adju- tant to the sulte of the emperor, was \ 2 that hildren should ation decided that the ci A killed on the station platform at |be excluded from this country. Ac naterhok ty a cordingly their deportation was or |i iyo. i youg woman who fired dered. This,however, is not final, @ shots into his body from an auto- atid) thie Oade haw salteady gone on kp? matte revolver and then, without re- peal to: Waablaagton: sistance, submitted to arrest. The capture of the girl was affected by 2—L Gen. Min's wife, who held her until the arrival of an offieer. This was the third successive attempt on the life of Gen. Min, who was condemned to death by the terrorists immediate- ly after the Moscow revolt last Decem- ber on account of the stern repres- sion practiced by a battalion under his command, and especially for the wholesale execution of persons con- demned by drum-head court martial Another Stensland Vitetim. for being caught with arms in their Chicago, Aug. 27.—Johann Kindler, | hands, 18 years old, Sunday became violent Gen. Min was returning from his and alarmed passengers in an Ash-|summer residence at Peterhof and land avenue car while brooding over | had just ereeted his wife and daughter the loss of $80 whitch he had depos jon the platform when a young woman inted in the failed Milwaukee Ave-|—almost a girl—approached from be- nue state bank. Kindler was arrest- | hind and fired two shots into his back ed and held pending an investigation | and then three more into his body as of his sanity. Kindler is the second |it sank to the ground. person to become mentally deranged — as a result of the failure. In addi-| St. Petersburg, Aug. 27.—An unsuc- tion three persons have committed | essful attempt upon the life of Baron suicide and one man fell dead follow- | Stahl {s reported to have been made ing the flight of President Stensland |!n the park at Peterhof Sunday night and the closing of the bank. The|but the story ig denied. A number police are still in the dark as to the |f arrests have, howéver, been made whereabouts of Stensland. {n the park during the evening. Baron eens Stahl bears some resemblance to Gen. Trépoff, commander of the pa- lace. A number of officers who might be mistaken for M. Trepoff have taken the precaution to have thetr beards shaved off. HEBREW ORPHANS BARRED. Knoxville, Tenn. Aug. Schwartz, president of the local He- brew congregation Monday sent a telegraphic protest to President Roosevelt against the deportation of the Hebrew orphans as ordered by Ellis Island officials Sunday. He de- clared Knoxville Hebrews would pro- vide for two of the children, | Arrested for Robbing Postoffice, Wayne ,Neb., Aug. 27.—Deputy Uni- ted States Marshal Haskell of St. Jo seph, Mo., accompanied by a detective Sunday arrested Henry Steele, alias “Jack” White on a charge of rob bing and burning the postoffice | tere Haute, Ind, Aug #1 Terre Barnard, Mo., several months 880 |tHaute distillers returned Monday Steele, the officers say, has been & | pom fugitive since he escaped from 4} meeting of both trust and inde; pen- Missour! jail. He was located on & | dene distillers was held. It {s stat- farm’ near Wayne where he has been | 44 by tocal owners of distilleries that working several weeks. The officers attorneys Standard took their prisoner to Miseourt Sun- i oe 00. oom day night. ean aEEEEEESE cnet She Started Out Young. Practioally all have replted in the Kokomo, Ind., Aug. 27—Lucy Hi, | affirmative: At the Chicago meeting 11 years old, daughter of Frank Hilt, |{t was the general opinion that the Saturday took $140 from a dresser, | outlook {s favorable for an nincrease bought some new clothes, jewelry /in business of 20 per cent this fall and a railway ticket to Dallas, Tex. jand winter. Gen. Min, a Personal Adjutant to the Square Garden, but Mr. Bryan Will Al- lined his well-matpred plan for re storing selfgovernment to the Fill- pinos with rafety to ourselves and tull justice to them In thie planit ie not proposed that we abandon the islands all together. Mr. Bryan would retain all the naval New York, Aug. 27.—The somecom- ing of William J. Bryan, after a tour around the world ,promises to {naug- urate the real opening of the com- moner’s third campaign for the presi- dency. Mr. Bryan is a passenger on GURE BY CUTICURA “T was afflicted with psoriasis for thirty-five years, It was in patches all over my body. I used three cakes , of Soap, six boxes board the North German Lloyd Cuticura Oint steamer Prinzess Irene, which is ex-| stations and coaling stations whicl: ern oy aw — to ace York next Wed-| may be deemed necessary for our cura Resolvent. nesday or Thursday, pay commercial operation: bathed with the The great popular reception td ha aoe P i Soap, applied the the Nebragkan will pe held at Madison | *¢ Uriens. Ointment once a Square Garden Thursday evening| While confining our military occu day, and took the under the auspices of the Commercial | pation to these stations, he woul! — as di- Tiavelers’ AnthTrugt League. Mayor! gnarantee the felanders agaluet} giv. 1 was completely cured, and t Tom I, Johnson of Cleveland will pre-| aggression by any other nation, think permanently, as is was about five side at the reception and representa! 1.4 ving them to control their own| Years ago. tive democrats from all sections of 8 “The psoriasis first made its a) affairs in their own way, and giving them euch benevolent assistance as might be required in the establish- ment and maintenance of orderly self-government. There ia sound policy as well es humanity in this plan. The Fili- pinos do not like our rule: They are likely to rebel against {t whenever they see the opportunity. Our oc- cupation of the islands is draining about $100,000,000 a yearfrom the pockets of American taxpayers. Our Government of them without their consent violates the fundamental prinoiple of the Declaration of Inde- pendence. The United States are not likely, under any conditions, to surrender x ter, our naval and commercial stations} Hutchinson, Kan., April 20, 1905.” in the Philippines, nor to allow oth-| mewerla rar Tngecken Co See Prope er nations to trespass there. But {n|-———-——— wi — order to hold them, itis not neces- sary tostultify ourselves, nor to Order of Publication. waste money lavishly in trying to} «pars or missouRI, elevate the Filipinos. ance in red spots, generally forming & circle, leaving in the center aspot about the size of a silver dollar of sound flesh. In a short time the affected circle = form a heavy es of = very appearance and wo dro) et to remove the nies aaa by bathing or using oil to soften them the flesh would be perfectly raw, and a light discharge bloody substance would ooze out. That scaly crust would form again in twenty-four hours. It was worse on my arms and limbs, al-, though it was in spots all over my body, also on my scalp. If I let the scales remain too long without remov- ing by bath or otherwise, the skin would crack and bleed. I suffered intense itching, worse at nights after tting warm in bed, or blood warm yy exercise, when it would be almost unbearable, : “To sum it all up, I would not go through such another ordeal of affliction for thirty-five years for the State of Kansas. (signed) W. M. Chides to United States will be present Mr. Biyap is expected to m»ke a two hours speech and to aliret* one or more open air meetings in Madison Square composed of those who are unable to gain admittance to the gar- den. The Madison Square reception will be but the beginning of a long yertes of similar affairs on smalier scale’ which willl end with a big pub- Me meeting of welcome when Mr. Bry- an reaches his home fn Loncoln, Neb. On Friday, the day after the Madi- son Square Garden reception, Mr. Bryan will leave for New Haven tn company with a large delegation of his Connecticut supporters. In New Haven he will be the guest of the New Haven democratic club and will deliver an address in the open air on the central green. An interesting fea- ture of his visit to Connecticut will be a formal conference of leading democrats from all the New England states, including candidates for governor, mayors of some of the New England cities democratic state committeemen of the New England members of the democratic national committee. This conference, it is announced ts for the purpose of ag ‘ee ing upon a common basis for the cani- paigns of this year and of two years hence. From New Haven, Mr. Bry- an will go to Bridgeport, whore he wiil Geliver an address in ths evening and on the following day he will ad- drese a meeting at Jersey City, On Sarsiday night he will be the guest of active newspa)<;* men who cuver po litical assigoments for their pacers Fatal Accident at Springfield, Mo. Springfield, Mo., Aug. 27.—Mrs, Ma- son, wife of Attorney Val Mason, who the past week conducted the defense of Doss Galbraith, the alleged mob leader, was thrown from a horse at five o'clock Sunday afternoon while riding with friends and sustained in- juries so severe that death resulted within two hours. County of Bates. if In the Circuit Court, Uctober term, 1906, Alice Rogers, Plaintiff, va. George M. Rogere, Defendant. Now atthis day comes the plaintiff herein, b; ber tee pes .Q Jackson, and file her peti- tion and ai idavit, allegin; ong other thin; JOPLIN’S RICH CANDIDATES. STOPPED A GRAFT. {Immigration Bureau Officials Put an End to the Importation of Little Greek Boys. Washington, Aug. 27.—We have stopped the importation of the little Greek boys who have been coming to this country in thousands in recent years,” said Commissioner of Immi- gration Sargent. “Practically all the large cities have scores of bootblack- Ing establishments filled with bright- eyed Greek lads of from 12 to 18 years. These were all brought over here by a European syndicate. But we have broken up the business. We reject these lads now on the ground that they are under age, unaccompanied by thelr parents and liable to become public charges through sickness or other ailments. We satisfied our- selves that the boys were coming here for the purpose of opening bootblack- Ing shops and not to go to school and 4 that defendant, George M 8, has abscond- The Race Between Connor and | <4 sn4.sveentsa nimseit trom his teual place of Holmes for the Senate, | rslgeotorine State or igourt e resident 0! 6 Stute o ari: tien that sald defendant be Hotiiod by pabilea Joplin, Mo., Aug. 27 —Whether | tion'that plaintiff has commenced a sult against enecess attends the Republicans or|oranictis Grobtets edge tee haraEe the Democrats, Joplin will send to} cause the defendant, George M- Rogers, has the Missouri state senate after the year next before ‘ae flog’ of the riginal reels r tailure to suppor ie personal fortune {s larger than that Totand appear at nis court, att et Koger of any other member of that body. house ta the sity of Butler, tn eatd county, on In short, the Twenty-elghth senator- fore the fret day of sad Ry anor el ead fal district will be represented by the} {othe I confessed, aad Judetnens Gil te cena: And itis forthe red, The Democrats have nominated mand ue frtbr arte To lavty in tae Boron WEEKLY Tiwxs, & newspaper published in said for state senator Thomas Connor, | county of Bates for four weeks successively, whose wealth {s somewhere in the} tion to be at least thirty days’ betore the first millions. The Republicans have| 27 % #id next October C'S balicLiy, iret erk. fortune is easily above the $150,000 : and seal of the cirenit co.xt of ; {szax.] “Bates county, this Sth day of August, mark. No man has ever been elected 196, C. M. BARKLEY, to the state senate whose fortune om ee eq ualed that of either of these rival the public for that position with the Order of Publication. same golden possessions. STATE OF MISSOURI, Would Pawn His Pulpit Suit. 3 ‘tion Ang, Bh 16, ta eres Macs , by his guardian and curator, Lewis Carmi, fil:; Aug. 27.—The Rev. W.| A: J. Lippelt, L. Howell, nee Levy, laintife, eburch in Oakford, Ill., arrived here with his family in a moneylesscondi- tion. The minister went toa bank and offered to pawn his euit of 96, in order to buy tickets to Rvans- ville, Ind., where he has relatives. The money was raised. "Sheriff's Sale in Partition, from the plaintiff, Alice Rogers, tor one whole election, November 6,& man whose hereof, tobe begun and holden at the court richest man in the state senate. ered according! published at least once a week, the last inser- nominated John R. Holmes, whose} 4 true coor fda tie sesoed. Witheae ey candidates, and none is now before County of Bates, well, her husband, and Leonard M. Long, pastor of the Methodiet : a Prince Albert preaching clothes for MAY.

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