The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, September 19, 1907, Page 1

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} VOL. XxIK, © BUTLER; MISSOURI, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1907. NO. 47 SWANGER CAN’T ‘Vancouver Riots Regarded ee eeaene toa (PLEASANT PORTER'S | ‘Man at His Best : Medicine. RACE TO GO, ; ?to™ te Popular Setence Montnly. ANNUL LICENSE. Worse Than Frisco Incident. sigs on oan areas Brain workers do their best between Bon.C.C, Brooks, Mayor of Sunbury, Ohio, also inne tor Parapore’ Beak wd of 25 and ps4 _ — and Sunbury Building and Loan Co, are preparing for wo — RC ove : a In An Interview Givena Year thas their work,no matter howexten- “I have the u' . virtacof Poruna. Itisa greatmedicine,,| Ago He Said, indians Will sehie largely routine, Lawyersend| pensation of Justice Accord- I havesived hi # ’ ot myn wi eae mY Soon be an Extinct Race. Jafter 40, but the learning was accom- ing to Missouri Statutes. ficial ¥, “4 FE canaot | xenses city star. plished by 40 or 45. Successful mer-| Jattarson City, Sept. 16.—Notice Pleasant Porter was principalchtef | chants lay foundations for wealth| was recetved by Secretary of State of the Creek nation, which ls made | nd success fn youth and middle life. | John E. Swanger that an Injunction up of 16,000 Creek Indians and ne |The great men that we know are all hag been issued in the federal court groe freedmen. Chief Porter was well|0ld men; but the foundations for! as 4 Joseph by Judge Pollock to educated ‘and talked fluently. He| thelr greatness wore laid when they !restrain him from annulling the dressed aa a business man. In an|Were young. Philosophers have) iicenses of the Chicago, Rock Island interview he sald: founded and announced thelreystems! & Pacitic Railroad Company from “One hundred years trom now my |! youth and early manhood; divine| going business in Missouri, The ee Tokio, Sept. 16—The Vancouver riot has created the t excitement ; Federal Court interferes in Dis- ' jn the Japanese capital, Fall details have been cabled to the Toklo pa-) Hap ee There are four verses. Verse 1. am Draniiies: \f Ayer’s Hair Vigor stops falling The tact that Baron Ishi, Director J hair. Verse 2. Ayer’s Hair of the Bureau of Commerce in the § Vigor makes the hair grow. Foreign Office, had a narrow escape |j Verse 3. Ayer’s Hair Vigor trom a mob fired with an anti-Jap-'Bcures dandruff. Verse 4. anese resentment, was commented § Ayer’s Hair Vigor makes the upon as indicating the intensity of J scalp healthy, and keeps it so. the bitterness, which 1s regarded as i [¢ is a regular hair-food; this exceeding anything manifested {nthe | is the real secret of its won- United States. derful success. race will be extinct. The American | 80d religious teachers have origina’ | Rook Islandis a forelgn corporation, | | Indian will be a lost race and I be- oe creeds = “es ne i and as euch, under a law passed by vhs ie aan ob ceabanemat The beet kind of © teetimental . | effective as preachers in early man- + | . eve I know enough about the hu. P y the last general assembly probibit-|-rhe Asai, commenting upon the ee eee en ae man family to know that at the end|hood. “Statesmen have projected BY,2: ©, Ager Co. Lowe of that time our descendants will be | thelr greatest acts of legislation di- prating and boasting of our blood. plomacy and reform fn early life. In It will have a tenor of legend and ro- the morning of life scientists have mance then. It isnot eo now, how-| Wrought out their data and practical- ever. There is very little reverence ly formulated their theories; generale for the Indian. It’s@ mad race to|@"d admirals have gatned their beat him out of his land and his | Greatest victories; lawyers have pav home. ed the way for leadership at the bar, “Jn evolution the Indian {s far be- | Physiclans have latd the groundwork hind the mark of 200 years ago, and for their greatest discoveries, poets this in apite of the kind efforts of the and artists and musicians have plan- government and the Caucasion to ned and in many instances executed wy : e give him so-called civilisation. Still, | thelr greatest masterpieces. _ HON. GC, BROOKS, he’s more enlightened. He’s been Ra rier eae HERE ares host of petty aliments | taught to steal and rob his brother, which are the direct result of the | just as the white man does, and he’s weather, been schooled in the art of faleehood This is more true of the excessive heat ard deceit. ‘wo hundred years ago of summer and the intense cold of win- ter, butis partly true of all seasons of |My race lived in {te own citles and ing foreign corporations from ap- pealing from a stateto a federal court, had laid {teelf Hable to drastic action on the part of the state authorities. The injunction proceed- ings will be heard before Judge Pol- lock at St. Joseph, September 16. The injunction is a result of a pro- ceeding by Presecuting Attorney Harry Herndon, of Clinton county, against the Rock Island to compel riot, saye it is evident that British | Columbia, not San Francisco, {s the | center of the greatest agitation. SARSAPARILLA, > YerS BE rece Don’t neglect your stomach, At ——___— --— -— the first indication of trouble take | something that will help {6 along {n | CUTS STEEL WITH A THREAD its work of digesting the food you eat. Kodol For Indigestion and Dyspepsia will do this. Sold by Kangas Convict Shows Peniten- Frank Clay, druggist. 7 — tiary Warden a Trick {t to atop all {ts passenger trains at| Second Fire Visits 4 T Lathrap, in that county, where the Courier Journal | or Two, road crosses the St. Joseph line of 3 | Leavenworth, Kan., Sept. 16 ~ the Santa Fe. Undera law enacted| Loulsville, Ky., Sept. 16.—Mire} When Warden McUlaughry of the lust winter, requiring trains to stop| Which broke out fora second time United States penitentiary goes to at such points, the road wasconvict- | endangered the plants of the Courler ' the national prisou congress tn Chi- ed inthe state supreme court and|Journal and Times and threatened | cago thistall, be will take along some- fined, appealing to the federal court, M aye = - a Lg thing that will ses the prison meu of , this step followed by the {injunction |Vourler Journal office building fell the country to thinking. It will be the year. had {ts own government. The red yy Savy ago = = "tally to restrain the secretary from abro- | {ntact after the fire of ten days ago. fn she shape of a pleve of steel about Whether it be @ cold or a cough, ca- | men prepared and maintatneda gov-| comes up to the proprietor’s recom: | gating ite license to operate in Mie-) The flames were brought under | eight inches tu length and of about bee tthe oe neta iar ernment to keep peace within and| mendation.” It eaves more lives }sourl. control with a loss of $25,000. The} the same thickness as a broomstick. aoe eh cutee 8 evi liable to be the |Fepel invasion from without. I don’t than all other throat and lung reme- So Bonduntiun Times was forced to abandonits last} This piece of steel was cus out uf a same, see but that they did itas well as yo See Swe bog Cuba’s Productiveness. edition. The editorial rooms were | cell in the new United States periten- The weather slightly deranges the |any other race on the globe. And) asthma, bronchitis, croup, ‘whoop- Dewis R. Freeman, in Review of Reviews, rendered untenantable but the press! ¢fary by Bob Clark, one of the fae mucous membranes of the organs and | now, now—well, they’re denied the|ing cough, quinsy, hoarseness and} Cuba, not excepting Java, with {ta| room and composing room, although | mous mutineers, now serving a lite the sorult is some functionsl:dissase. ’ 1 seins, 1 hthiete, stops hemorrhages of the | 80,000,000 people, is the most pro-| Partially flooded, will be used to get | sentence. This job was done with “You are educated, fully civilized ae ene fgg tng up. Guar-| ductiveqaland in the world, and the| Out the regular issue of the Courler- | ous the ald of a saw. and liveas a white man. You are] spe st Oy aed tottieirea | disturbatees of last fall, which neces. | Journal. Clark cus the eteel bar out of hie speaking for yourself or your race?” ve é The origin of the fire which, like} col] wish the strings unraveled from the first one, broke out on the top) his prison socks. pl aR as aac altated Lgarvention, found {t begin- he was asked. ning easily to outdo the best yearsit “For myself,” was the quick re- Farmer Wounded by Sheriff. floor of the building, {s unknown-/ Many of the prison officlals refused The Courier Journal {s owned and | ¢o believe theetory when it came from had known before the war that re- sponse. “Iam an IndlanandI amj| Plattsburg, Mo., Sept. 16.—Wil-|eulted in ite independence. Sugar, true to my blood and race. It’s edited by Henry Watterson. Clark’s own lips, but heshowed thenr. Warden McClaughry gave Clark a Hem Daniel, a wealthy farmer, living | which last year just touched the old natural that I should be bitter/ near Hample, fifteen miles northwest} high-water mark of 1,100,000 tons, against the encroachments upon our $100 Reward, fro. string and a piece of sand paper and The readers of this paper will be| gold him to go to work on another of Plattsburg, was shot while resist-| made in 1894, would have gone land, isn’t t? Do you know what {¢| {ng Sheriff Peter Kelly and was taken | near to 1,500,000 tons but for the jhe read tthe paper will be means. It means the extinction of| td a hospital in St. Joseph, serlously | misfortune of the drought. The]? 0 learn that there is at least} +. iy. wanted so see the work wounded. tobacco crop reached the record- one dreaded disease that science has our race eventually. been able to cure in all stages, and | done with his own eyes. He posted “Years and years ago we were liv-| Daniel appeared before Jud g@¢/ breaking total of $51,000,000, that | thatis Catarrh. Hoall’s Catarrh Cure | a guard to see that Clark didn’tebirk ing in Misstestpp!, Alabama and| Burnes in the Clinton circuit court to | ¢o the value of $36,000,000 having | {8 the only positive cure now known |{n his work. ( lark started in on the Georgia. The United States govern-| answer a charge of disturbing the| been expired. This, with sugar and|*© the medical fraternity. Catarrh! io ay 10:30 o'clock In the morning ment sent the white man to treat| peace. He persisted in talking in the | other products, footed up a remark- being @ constitutional disease, re) 04 as 3 o'clock in the afternoon he courtroom and was committed to/| able total of nearly $100,250,000 to with us and we agreed to the treaty faire Bay yy — — had the bar in two. He used only exchanges which gave us land in the | jall by the Judge for contempt. The/thecredft of exports. Railroad mile-| nally, acting directly upon the blood | one string. When he did the work Indian Territory for our home. The | sheriff was taking his prisoner to jail | agehai pearly doubled since the war,|4nd mucous surfaces of the eyatem, | on the sly he ueed four or fivestrings government promised us we might/ when Daniel tried to draw a revolvers shore ing now in the vicinity of Tae toee atta pene ne out of his socks. He consumed eigh- live there, owning our landsin com-|from his pocket. Believing his Iife|/1,500 miles of broad-guage line on cena by ballding - pork seheaty teen hours when he sawed the bar tn mon and governing ourselves, so| was in danger, the sheriff turned on | the island, in addition to many hun-|{uytion and assisting nature in doing|/@n attempt to gain his freedom, long as water rung and grass grows. | Daniel with his own revolver and|dred miles of private lines serving |its work. The proprietors have s0|Then he had nothing but sand to “Then what happened? In 1893] senta bullet into the prisoner’s chest. | various of the sugar plantations. much faith in its curative powers! outa cutting edge on his strings. the government created a commis-| Daniel is expected to recover. A Flaw in the Text Book that they offer One Hundred Dollars | When he had sandpaper, he natural- A Hamane Appeal. A humane citizen of Richmond, ~ 2 U. D. i Lala in St., saye:. “Ta to all per- sons with weak p< gr take Dr. Peruna has become a standby in thousands of homes for minor ail: ments of th*s sort. bs Evicted 1,000 Russian Students St. Petersburg, Sept. 16.—The council of ministers has ordered the closing of all the dormitorles attach- ed to the inatitutions of higher learn- ing hore, and at Moscow, because the police admit inability to prevent them from being used as meeting and hiding places for revolutioniate. In accordance with this order, 1,000 students have been evicted from the dormitories of the Polytechnic school. The students find the great- est difficulty in obtaining lodgings elsewhere. DeWitt’s Carbolized Witch Hazel Salve is good for boils, burns, cuts, scalds and skin .ifasases.’ I¢ ts eepe- for piles.. Sold by Frank \ Clay, It Bars Oleomargarine. for any case that {t fails to cure. Nevada Post. nd for list of testimonials. A flaw has been found in the new Address, Co , Toledo, 0 th should and | law regulating the price of textbooks. Zs. Cuauen BS, Fede, 0, elation, mind zou, had We hoes 80} sears! It promises in a measure to unravel Take Hall's Facily Pile tor con ‘ake Hall’s Fam! is for con- eae Se Om as sume presi 5 , {the mesh in which the bookdealers | stipation. j ior ee ve ome to G0) Y., some time ago, decided to make a bold | wore entangled but in the end makes — out of existence as @ government) departure from the usual course ts tateo (i the Iw. Beau Was Barred, The law allows the book dealer a profit of 15 per cent, but it fixes no She Killed Herself. ‘ whiel is called penalty should the book dealercharge| (Ottawa, Kas., Sept. 16.—The life- pgp eet ms og grait- more. The members of the board of | jogs body of Daisy Greenfield, the 15- er and the land shark to pounce up- bagatnce educatlog.gee to fortelt thelr offices, | year-old daughter of A. A. Greenfield, he Indian and get his land. They : nee frome secret | and the hers are to be finednot|@ prominent farmer living in the pot ber us ten saa andagainst| * less tha $310 nor more than $1,000} northwest part of this county, wae rere ae {we were as emart for violating the law, but the legisla- | found in her bed early this morning. tors forgot all about the dealers. As} a potson bottle and a letter of four the law now stands the book dealer | pages, stating that the girl’s parents may charge anything for his school | had forbidden her to go with Charles books. He may violate the law to/ Alien, A young man of the neighbor- any extent fat he cannot be punish-| hood, told a story of sulcide. St. Louls, Sept. 16.—Oleomarga rine, colored to resemble butter, can- not be manufactured or sold in Mis- aourl after October 1, according to a ruling jost made by RM. Wash- - burn of the dairy and pure food com- mission. The ruling 1s the most aweeping yet made by the dairy and food commission einre the enactment of the new state food end drag lawe. Joplin Newspaper Blown Up. Joplin, Mo., Sept. 16.—The oftive of the News-Herald, a Republican daily paper here, was bléwn up by dynamite. The loss fs about $40,- 000. The new Goff perfecting press, putin last week at a cost of $15,000, iscompletely wrecked. Five notype machines were ruined, the c flice fur- niture blown to pieces and type and composing room material scattered over the street. Several unexploded sticks of dynamite were found. No reason for the act has been found. It was not known that the paper had an enemy capable of such adeed. There have been no serious political, labor or business troubles into our lands to treat again. It was decided, the white man’s de- were taught to cutit up intosquares, Un the chief ote nation, © | ; : connected with the paper that were ; : ed. The fa¥ was discovered bythe} The girl and young Allen had been . posed governor, I’m at the head of rie . public. As the News-Herald {6 an af- Todian attorneystor the board ofeducation. | at church together Sunday evening, ternoon paper, no one was at work and when they parted at 11:30 Mies Greenfield seemed to be in good epirite. said a man In the Armourdele Health in the Canal Zone. | Pelee Station. high wages paid make it a Seleote ne join the force of atilled Lawrence, Kan., Sept. 16 —Mar- workmen needed to construct the|shall Tuttle, 9 years old, was killed - | Saturday evening at Sibley, a town @ few miles south of here, by a trap gun eet by a merchant to catch chick- en thieves. The little boy was play- m malari-|ing near the chicken coop and acel- Bitters on ‘400, bill dentally touched the wire connected in the plant. This seems to preclude any desire to injure anyone person- News- Herald. ally. P.E. Burton {is editor of the -

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