The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, August 1, 1907, Page 1

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eekly Cimes. WORKINGMEN EVERYWHERE] gyp oF THE HOLY 6RAIL? | USE PE-RU-NA. — eg % fi The Average Household Finds ve Pe-ru-na Not Only a Friend yin Time of Need, But a Sav. ing of Doctor Bills, Pe-ru-na is to Be Found in Thousands of Homes of the Working Men, “Philippine Situation. | MONROE CITY RINGS The.situation in the Philippines is deseribed by a Manila cablegram to CURFEW FOR NEGRO. England Excited Over the Find-| the Houston (‘Texas) Post as follows: — “The possibility of war between the ing of an Ancient Vessel. [United States and Japan furnishes| ™/Ssouri Black Men Must Stay the principle topic of discussion in} Off Streets After 8:30 the clubs, thénewspapers and in », army 6nd navy circles. The leader O'clock at Night. of theFilipino junta stationed in} Monroe City, Mo., July 29.—The Tokio 4s in regular correspondence | curtew rings for negroes in Monroe with the Independistas in, the islands, | City, since a crowd of black men at- and {fe constantly urging them to tacked the Reverend Father Thomas Prepare to recelve the Japanese in-| Mullen, Pastor of the Holy Rosary vaders, who he says, will quickly | church. Many well-known citizens give thom thelr independence. In |have banded themselves together to the lag, communication he sent be- keep the negroes from the streets at fore thé American battle ships were night. ordered to the Pacific he poattively| While the citizens have no stipula. Predicted & war within two years. | ted Organization, they maintain an American intelligence officers are agreement to make the negroes obey catty lly observing the attitude of them. Placards have been posted, the natives. The Filipino newspa-/ warning negroes that if they are not pers frequently refer to the expected | off the streets at 8:30 p.m. each day war, discussing the position they they must “suffer the consequences,” should assume. The Sun correspon-| 4 bell is rung at this time each|~— dent’s observation {s that during | night, and now all Monroe City ne-| HAD $300,000 BUT the last year there has been conald- groes wend their may emerard : erable pro-Japanese talk in several! when the curfew rings. LIVED IN HOVEL. of the provinces. Still, recent study| Two negroes of Shelbina heard of of the situation seems to show that Monroe | {ty’s curfew and determined there has been a reaction to Amorl-|to show their friends here that they | Life of Penury and Squalor Was cantsm among the Filipino leaders | would not obe it. The negroes came and {nfluential provinclals, and this from Shalbien several p sh ago. Revealed By Death of Cali- Conclaston ts borne out by the opin-| One of them, known in Shelbina as a fornia Miser. ion of conservative and trained of- desperado, tore down one of the ficers? This reaction is due princt- placards. The Marshal caught him Fresno, Cal., July 29.—In the death pally to the prompt military and in the act and locked him up. The of W. H. Olyn, an old miser, whocon- naval activity at Cavite, on the negro was released at midnight, tn ducted a small umbrella shop fn islands of Corregidor and Grande, | time to catch atrain for Shelbina, town, {s revealed the story of a Iifeot and at the naval station, Olongapo, | but before he could reach thestation |Pe@¥ry and equalor. The old man and especially on account of the for- @ crowd of citizens setzed him, and, died from senile weaknesses induced midable fleet ordered to the Pacific carrying him to the eastern edge of | PY the wretchedness and poverty in and the universial determination of town, gave him forty-nine Iaehes,| "Bich he lived, and yet he fs found te 4 ag aml ay <n an The desperado’s companton \ was "iaeaes cine of real estate eward ja « n, was informed |*istance. Moreover, the Filipinos, |tound and the two negroes were told| 1° fortu that the cup wan vior’s and be} >eing Christians, naturally would|to take the first train tor Shelbina |!" Washington, D. C., and ye must bury {t in Gilitonbury abbey, not care to affiliate with non-Chrie- and never come back. They have various banks. Olyn was a familiar trig did ound later thru’| ans. Today General Malver, the not-been in Monroe City since. figure to all Fresnans as he sat in his the ation oh shade seen. former rebel who surrendered to Several nights ago a crowd of tinv shop mending umbrellas all day The cup te of bl nen heune General Bell, offered to ratee a reg!-| drunken negroes were quarreling 1n long, sometimes earning as much as kind, cunningly inlaid with silver |™eat of guerrillas provided that the front of the Reverend Father Mol- $10. The old man claimed he was a lect, 18 fo now tn the possesion of United states would furnish equip-|ien’s restdence. When he tried to Colonel {n the Federal army. Prof. Crookes, who has undertaken|™"*. Probably the former gener- quiet the prowlers the priest was| 4 voc weeks ago - pg — to solve the mystery. als, Catiles and Tinio, will follow his|strack on the head with a whieky|924 filth of the hut in which he liv example. One question that is little bottle and injured. The boys of was called to the attention of the considered by the public, but which | Monroe City began the campaign to | °alth Inspector and the place was fe engaging the careful thought of Cop the negroes off the strects at ordered swept out. It had been his the authorlettes, fs the disposition, night, bus when they carried their|®b0de for the past dozen years and in case of war, of the 5,000 scouts methods to the extreme, older cltt- here he kept his tools and the f:w and 5,000 constabulary. All the Seas took the matter in hand. The cooking utensils with which his frugal former and approximately half the City Council has discuseed thetrouble | ™°8!s were prepared. When tho latter are armed with the Krag-Jor-| without takin gz action. ~ dwelling was searched {¢ was found ae geneen rifile. : Their American of-| gtouteville, eight miles southwest | at $117 in gold and ellver was 3 ficers generally vouch for the {nteg- | of here, will notallowa negro tostay |S0¥ed away in- an old stoveptpo. rity of the natve troops. But a in town. Monroe county is settled This money was to have taken him # similar condition prevalled during largely by Southerners. east to visit his children, who live in bs The Find of a Polish Merchant Who is a Clairveyant—Why They Believe it the Cup From Which Christ Drank. London, July 26 —Sctentista, the- Ologians and antiquarians are die- cussing a cup of great antiquity which has been unearthed in Glaston- bury abbey under remarkable cir- cumstances. Enthuelasts hope it may prove to be the veritable Holy Grail cup used by the Savior at the last supper. According to the legend, the cup was brought to England after the crucifixion. A rich Polfah merchant who is a clairvoyant, found the cup, communicated the find to a in- guished gathering, including Sir Wm Crookes, the Duke of Newcastle, Lord Halifax, Lord Brownlow, Lord Cecil, Whitelaw Reid, the American ambas- sador, the Rev. R. J. Campbell and others. The Pole eald that in 1902 he re- ceived an {mpression that some holy relic was buried in Glastonbury, Last September, he says, he saw the place in’ dream and asearch reveal- ed the cup. Dr. Goodchild adds the moat remarkable part of the story. He is an antiquarian.. He declares the cup was buried by him in Glas- tonbury in 1898, He sald he discov- ed it in Bordighera in 1885, and af- Do you pin your hat tv your own hair? Can’t do ir? Haven't enough bair? It must be you do not know Ayer’s Hair Vigor! Here’s an intro- duction! May the acquaint- ance result in a heavy growth of rich, thick, glossy hair! Use this splendid hair-food, | stop your falling hair, and get rid of your dandruff. The best kind of a testimonial — “Sold for over sixty years.” Lad J.C. Ayer Co., Lowell, * Meo manufacturers of y e rs SARSAPARILLA, PILLS, CHERRY PECTORAL. Mr. Victor Patnesude, 888 Madison street, Topeka, Kas., a well-known car- i penter and member of Knights and f Ladies of Security, writes: “Twelve years ago 1 had a severe at- tack of la grippe and I never Yreally re- Covered my health and strength, but Brew weaker every year, until I was unable to work, “Two years ago I began using Peruna and it built up my strength so thatin a couple of months I was able to go to work again.” Sg A workingman’s all ages and both ey are subject to slight ail- for every time a petty sick- z s Ese whe The workingmen everywhere have come to realize that Peruna is the workingman’s friend and saves him not only sickness, but a-great many dollars every year, * always keep a bottle in the house, and tarian Church of Pinetown, N, C.,/ Mrs. Dukes thinks it has done her ‘writes: more good than anything she has ever “My wife has been in a very bad state teken. of health tor several years, aNd nothing |' “My little boy ten years old, was pale seemed to do her any good until she be-| and had but little life. He began to use gan to use Peruna. Since then the|Peruna the day his mother began, color has returned to her face, and she To-day his face is rosy, and he is outin is gaining in flesh every day, and I be-| the yard running and jumping with the isdom Ancients. ae abele a well woman to-day, We! rest of the children.” The Wi of the A —_-_ — “T’ve heard a. whole lot about the AVERS STEPMOTHER ‘wisdom of the ancients,’ ” remarked IS PART NEGRESS. the Wise Guy as he deftly abstracted a cracker from the barrel and moved Pension Commissioner Warner stealthily towards the cheese box. “This ‘wisdom of the ancients’ bus!- Makes Startling Charge in | on mines, had eerved tho state as a ness {a all fol-de-rol. \When old Ram- Will Contest. convict for nearly twenty years on a eses, or whatever his he was, built Clinton, Ill, July 23.—Commis | %2tence that was only for twenty stoner of Pensions Vespasian Warn-| onthe. The clerk, when the papers Rey. J. G. Dukes, Pastor of the Uni- Sek, A pecullar story fs told by the Montgomery, Ala, correspondent for the St. Louls Globe-Democrat in this way: ‘Rena Rivers, who died a few days ago at one of thestate pris- the pryamids he was’ just a common old skate who puta million or so of the disarmament of the native troops Cincinnat! and Washington and who a er, one the promfnent members of| Were made out, made @ mistake in | laborers at work, and when the thing| before the Indian mutiny in 1857.” | ‘Shot Him at Rival’s House, _| Vi! inherit his fortune, % iT 6 th be instead | was done he merely had mid a ea SRT POY eee & President Roosevelt's official faintly, | °O''n& ous she nom tse! hi rs a 9 Petey ie . Kodol For Indigestion and Dys-| Log Angeles, Cal., July 23.—George} Kennedy's Laxative Cough Syrup &. has gone into court in'this clty and|° months. She was about'12 years|on his hands. ; wise 8¢-| pepsta isa preparation of vegetable T. Bennett rletor of the Ben-|@cts gently upon the bowele and E sworn that his stepmother, Mrs, old, and was eent up from a poor-|cording to this day end generation | acids and contains the same juices | *: “eBnett, prop r of the Ben- ly settled part of the state, where the paging ii yi san van court at that time was crudely ad- b climax in the Warndp will case cower cay et tarde 4n Which the commiasionér of pen- pe wen! wines slons is vitally interested aa.an heir | 924 was iy ote rg = an of the late John Warner, came to-| *¥° Years. & few days she was day with the filing by the respon-| %2* away to the mines, and there dents of an anended answer making she remained until hey death recalled he would have echemed it a little dif. ferent. “He would have organized the Egyptian Pyramid and Development company and {asued alot of preferred andcommon stock, to say nothing of @ lot of gold debenture bonds. When these were sold—retaining found in a healthy stomach. It|nett Electrical company, was shot| ‘8s the whole system of coughs digests what you cot Sold by Clay’s | and killed last night by Estelle Cor. a. " tage in wae } Drag Store. well, @ young woman with whom he irritation. Sold by Clay’s Drug wie had lived for the last five years, | Store. zs , Bennett was killed ashe saton the)... §§ ————— a a je. hereon ee Pompe sed by | Porch of the homeot Mies Marguerite | Mail Six Years Old Recovered. he weaknesses and falling, or other displace- | Bennett, who, although of the same Seattle, Wash., July 27.—The sled- e baci “ yok ated <0 Ponytail 7 ae — ke load of mafl abandoned six years x who she was. The “white ‘man forjenough, of course, to keep him in headache; disziness, tmagiiary shacks cco! to the story related by/ ago by Geo. A, Carpenter and party, ae gee of John Warner, who| Vom her mother worked became in-| control—he would have organized a | dark spots floating | fetnrs theeren 4 gue: Miss Corwell,: Bennett has of late when they were overtaken by a blis- was Commissioner Warner’s father, | *Tested in the case, and it occured|bullding company with the usual Descing dows tn eee been @ frequent caller at the home of | sard on the winter trail betwoon San. ia Yalued at nearly $2,000,000, and to him that the sentence was a long | grist of common, preferred and firet region, disagreeable drains pelvic Mies Bennett and Miss Corwell be- dle and Nome, Alaska, has just been the widow is fighting for her dower | 02¢ for s0.emall a crime,so he looked mortgage bonds. These would have | organ aintspells with general weakness, came convinced that he was about! found by Sam M. Gide and Thomas righys, Vespasion Warner, who ie isup. He discovered the mistake, |been worked off on the sh ble number of the above | $o desert her. Last night she drove| Boust, who reached Nome from San- ; tor, allogte, however, ‘that an | but too late so help the girl. How-| Egyptians, and while’ they were fig- to Mise Bennett’s home in a cab, and| di by way of Noxapaga divide. The tans egreement made by Ise- ever, her. mother, who. {s now old| uring on thelr dividends he would F calling Bennett to where his motor | sled and its load of mail were aban- bella Robinson, Jeter Mrs, John) 94 Ill and needs help, has had.» bill|Have organized @ holding company | APs car stood af the carb, shot him/doned in January, 1901, but when “Warner and his father, stands in {Presented to the legislature to have that would bring in some more mon- inyigon the letters were recovered the addros- “the way of the widow's claims, and | the state pay for the difference in the |ey and at the same time give him | Ua see wore still legible and a watch “that, farthermore, his stepmother | ‘lime the daughter served and the|control of ‘the finances of all three which had lain eix years on the trail, started again when wound and has kept perfect time since. The mail time she should have served.” eat spar- inp ie properly. We should algo| was protected by tarpaulins, “Regular as the Sua” the stomach ae much as possible —__. Use of a litle Kodol orcasious| DeWitt's arbollzed Witch Hazel RJ, MMORRIS ee etic 2 ene eee Kodol ‘For Indigestion and | Salve penetrates the pores and heals will quickly. Sold by Clay's Drug Store. o * —_-_ A Conductor is a Suicide, 8t. Joseph, Mo., July 27.—Samuel H. Smith, 35 years old, of Kansas City, formesly a conductor on the Burlington, committed suicide here by jumping from the Grand Island bridge into the Missouri river. His Wife, from whom he is separated, now lives there and is employed by a per- -- trait company. A note found on the -|bridge-amye:. “My wife has lelt me andl am tired of life, Laman old

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