The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, November 17, 1904, Page 9

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; MEXICAN MEXICAN MEXICAN " MEXICAN ; Mustang Liniment Mustang ‘Liniment Mustang Liniment: Mustang Liniment Mustang Liniment Mustang Liniment F cures Cuts, Burns, Bruises. ‘In use for over sixty years. for Man, Beast or Poultry. Best for Horse ailments. limbers up Stiff Joints. cures Frostbites and Chilblains. MEXICAN MEXICAN MEXIC. MEXICAN MEXICAN Mustang 3 Liniment Mustang Liniment Mustang Liniment Mustang Liniment Mustang Liniment Mustang Liniment cures Sprains cia aa cures Spavin and Ringbone. heals Old Sores quickly. Best for Cattle ailments. penetrates to thé very bone. : Best thing for a lame horse. MEXICAN MEXICAN MEXICAN . i Mustang Liniment Mustang | Liniment Mustang Liniment Mustang’ TLiniment Mustang Liniment Mustarg Liniment ' {a a positive cure for Piles. cures all forms of RE »matism. cures Caked Udder in cows. Pest for She-n ailments. always vives satisfaction. drives out all inflammation. e — Railway Time Table Penitentary Twine Factory. In answer to a letter from the Ru- ralist, Col. Albert O. Allen gives the following account of the binder twine factory, in the state prison. Replying to your inquiries of recent date I beg to say: First. The last legislature appro- priated $35,000 to purchase, erect and maintain all the necessary ma- chinery and equippments for the manufacture of twine used by far- mers, Second, The appropriation of $15,- 000 for, the erecting of the necessary buildings, ete. Third, That the appropriation of @ specialty. $125,000 for the purchase of the raw material, which provided that the twine when sold, that the proceeds DR- J. M. CHRISTY, be paid in to the state treasury to Diseases of women and Children # Bpectatty | the creditof this appropriation which Office The Over Butler Cash Depart- is called the “Revolving Fund.” wont Bore, Butler, No, Fourth, That the selling priceshall etter Be Station, KEE RERE meme mur att So ESBS Bak5e Ts oP. M. T. C, BOULWARE, Physician and Surgeon. Office North Side Square, Butler, Mo. Diseaves of women and children Tele 20, House Tel 10 “awn abt suas be fixed by toe warden, by and with DR, J. T. HOLL the aivicd and approval of the said board of inapectors each year as near DENTIST. as practicable, and not later than March the first, etc. Fifth, The said wargen is herein invested with power to sell the said twine to the farmers of the state for cash, free on board thecars at Jeffer son City, and ata price per pound sufficient only to indemnify the state against loss in the manufacture thereof and the said warden is hereby further authorized to sell the said twine in bulk to one or more persone for cash, in each county in the state, and if 80, shall r quire each cf said purchasers in buik to eunver into a written or printed agreement that he will resell ths said twine only to actual consumers and who want the same for their own use, ete. The factory is already installed and is capable of turuivg out 10,000 pounds of binding twine per day. We have now in the warehouse at the penitentiary 10,000 bales of sisal. The factory isruoningevery day and we have & superintendent who ts training the men in their work and we thiok that it won’t'be long until we will turn out the fall capacity of 10,000 pounds daily. It is the inten- tion of the present board to make nothing but first class twine, and for the present at least, sisal will be used. We will soon order another 1,000 bales of hemp, part of which will be sisal and manila, but as before stated, nothing but first class twine will be turned out. : Yours very truly, ALBerT 0, ALLEN, Jefferson City, Mo. State Auditor. , ame thatlead to Hagedorn’s Patudio. north side square Butler, Mo B. F. JETER, Attorney at Law and Justice, Office over H. H, Nichols, Kast side square, Butler, Mo Infirmary of Osteopathy ‘0 blocks west of Square, on Ohi Street. Chronic diseases a Specialty. HARRIET FREDERICK, Butler, Mo. ALMOST IWREE. THE ' ICE-A-WEEK REPUBLIC AND THE MODERN FARMER FOR BO Cents. 'o give every reader in this terri- all the campaiga and election sand an excellent farm journal, will send upon receipt of twenty nts e@ Twice-a-Week Republic heluding The Farm, Visitor,. from ow until December 1, 1904, and The Modern Farmer, _ A Farmer’s Family Newspaper, rom Dec. 1, 1904, to Dee. 1. 1905. his is an unprecedented offer you pannot afford to miss. Send 20 cents CaASsSTORIA. once and get regularly the News| Bears the The Kind You Have Always Bought f the Day, the campaign, the Farm = le nd Home. Be sure to address all mail to THE REPUBLIC, St, Louis, Mo. ' SAMPLECOPIES FREE. Where buth papers are not desired eriptions for either separately or the term stated above will be ac- epted upon recept of TEN CENTS. A Blazing Shell at Night. Fort Riley, Kas., Nov 8 —The Sev enth field battery, equipped with the new rapid fire field guns, gave an exhibition last night before the field ‘artillery drill regulations board of firing, using shells fitted with an in-|™ vention known as the Semple tracer. This invention is a small cylinder in the base of the shell filled with a com- position which is ignited by the dis- charge of the gun. By its burning it traces the trajectory of theshellfrom the gun to the point of fall. It fur- nishes a quick means of determining range at night. Traveling at about |2,000 feet a second, the shells had y the appearance of comets. At the|* TR point of fall the tracer left the shell By ALL DmvGorers._ Jand shot straight into the air about BICEARDS: @ hundred feet and then, turning all agiare, shot to the ground like a shooting star over the spot where ‘ eae had struck. will ‘Recognize Passports. ; Washington,” Noy. 9—The state department to-day ‘received a cable |gram from the American Embasey at St. Petersburg which warrants the bs assumption that the Russian gov- A $50,000 WEDDING GIFT {FOILED AN ARKANSAS MOB. —_—— George Crocker’s Little Surprise| the Sheriff at Benton Took a for His Stepdaughter, Mar- ried Wednesday. New York, Nov. 8.—‘‘Here, my dear,” said George Crocker to hie stepdaughter, Alice Rutherford, “you are to be married to-day, I know, but I have been so busy and worried of late that I have not been able to buy youa wedding present. Take this and get something for yourvelf with it.” With that he handed her a folded paper. She opened the folded paper and read: “Pay to the order of Mra J. Langdon Erving fifty thousand dollars.”’ Mr. Crocker gave $50,000 to his other stepdaughter, Miss Em ma W. Rutherford, when she was married last winter to Philip Kear ney. Miss Rutherford was married at Mr Crocker’s home here. On ac count of Mrs. Crocker’s recent death it was quiet. Miss Rutherford, who is the older of the late \ ra, Crocker’s two daughters, will have her cousin, Miss Beatrice Wright, as her maid of honor. Mr. Eeving’s brother, Van Rensealaer, was best man Madman Climbed on Hearse to Drive It Columbus Grove, Ohio, Nov, 8.— Elmer Daring, a young man of Leip sie, has been committed to the Coledo State hospital for treatment. Daring had @ mania for horses and imagined himself the owner of the city livery. He hired out turnouts at will and made contracts for the same. When the remains of a for- mer Leipsic resident were brought chere for burial, Daring met the fuderal party, and, believing he own- ed the livery, endeavored to eject the driver aud funeral director and drive the hearse himself. He refused to leave the seat on the hearse, and when forcibly removed cursed and acted likea madman. The relatives were frightened by the row on the hearse where reposed the remains of Negro to a Place of Safety. : Benton, Ark., Nov. 10.—A message to the sheriff of Saline county to the sheriff of Jefferson county prevefted @ lynching bere thismorning. When Sheriff George B. Kelley was advised by wire that a mob had started for Pine Bluff by rail for this place to lynch Huston Hoqker, a negro, who wae in jail here, that official quietly moved Hooker from the jail to a place of safety A epecial train ar rived from Pine Bloff at 3 o'clock this morning, but the mob fatled to fiad Hovker, The crowd soon re- turned to Pine Bluff. It is not generally known where Sheriff Kelly ‘placed the prisoner. Hooker was a porter on the 8b Louie, Iron Mountain & Scuthern railroad and shot and billed a con- ductor, P D, Atwood, on a@ Pine Bluff accomodation train near Farre!] October,25, At first Hooker was taken to Little Rock for safe keeping and two attempts were made to lynch him there the day of the tragedy. He was thea brought to this plage. The Cabbage Snake Scare. More then a hundred letters have been received by the Missouri Agri. cultural College asking for intorma- tion concerning the so called ‘‘poison- ous cabbage snake” and the collec. tion of snails, centipedes and other creaping things received from these inquirers would form the fonndation for a splendid collection of Missouri’s lower animal lite. Tne most pecu iv thing about this scare that has swept the state from one end to the other is that it has no foundation in fact. Professor J.M Stedman, En tomologist of the College saya, “Not athing is found on cabbage that could not have been found any fall for the last twenty years, “And more than this,” he continues, ‘there is not’an animal in the world that their loyed one and the women of the will poison cabbage 80 as to injure party nearly collapsed. Night Off. Prof. —— of Harvard is much in- terested in epilepsy in its different the person eating the cabbage alone. or both cabbigs and animal. The whole scare seems to have started “Fy Onra. he Kid You ttave Abaye Boogtt froma faka report concocted by a correspoadent of one of the St, Louis papers. Stopped Prayer ar Dead to Wed Two | by the tentative, rehensible flipper of forms. During a summer sojourn in Appleton, Wis, Nov. 8 —Feara cf the mountuins he heard of an old parental obj-ction to their marriage woman with epilepsy who had lived caused Johi Du Chaine, ot Harris, to the age of 79 yeurs. wWuriows tO} aad Kate Barrett of this city, toin- know the details of so unusual a terrupt the Rav. Father Reed of St. case, he interviewed the widower. Joseph’s church as he was reading pas Having it. quired concerning different | mass for the souls of the dead and symptoms, he proceeded: ask that he marry themimmediately, “Did she grind her teeth much at There was a rapid exchange of ques- night?” tions and answers and then the priest ‘The old man considered for a mO-| turned the leaves of his bork trom ment and then replied: the prayers for the dead to the wed- “Wal, I dunno as she wore ’em at ding ceremony and, betore the other night.” —Lippincott’s. worshipers reatiz¢d what was going on, Kate Barrett and Joho DuGbaine were married. Before the newly married couple bad reached the door ths prayer for the souls of the dead were being con- tinued % The Missouri Mule. A Missouri paper saye “our advice to Missouri is don’t buy automobiles; buy mules.” This blast of wisdom is based upon a prediction of govern- ment authorities that next year pick- ed mules will be worth $230 and dratt mules will be in demand at $20U each: The mule has become a social and economic necessity. As one enthu- silastic writer pyts it, “The mule is fittest, hence it is bound to survive. Long alter the last human being has been kicked off the fence of the earth Andrew Carnegie is Sick. New York, Nov. —Andrew Carnegie is under the care of his physician be- eause .of. a recurrence of throat trouble from which he has suffered during the past ) ear. The relaxation of the muscles of the throat made conversation, even with members of the family, inad- visable, and, acting urfder directions of his physician, he remained alone in his rooms yesterday, seeing no one but his secretary. 3 QASTORIA @ Missouri mule, that staunch ani- mal will roam and bray through the hills and continue to command the top of the market.” . - A Ton of Dynamite Exploded. ‘Mount Verhion, N. ¥., Nov. .8—A Uabicabag esr é Netti iniiohathtisiatiin cH r A ed HAY AND GRAIN. We are in the market for your hay and grain for which we will pay the highest market price. Will try and furnish sacks to patrons when ready to thresh. We keep a full line of feed on hand at all times, and also handle one of the best brands of Kansas hard wheat flour, Try us when you wish to buy—don’t for- get us when you want to sell. eoples Elevator Co. ee ee A A A A A A a a 3 Direct from the Factory Cut Out The Middle Man. Nine tenths of the people are looking for this, Now we have the largest Harness and Saddle Factory In Southwest Mo. and can duplicate any goods in leather line--offered by cat- alogue houses, So come and see us and let us show you. Keep your money at home. We keep every thing that horse owners need. Double wagon harness from $10 to $30. Single harness $7.50 to $25. Second harness $3 00 to $15. Saddies of all styles and prices from the cheapest tothe rteel fork cow boy and sole leather spring seat saddles, Lap rohes, horse blankets, dusters and fly nets, harness oil and soaps, limi- ments for man or beast, each oils axel grease, tents, waxon covers, wen’s canvass leguings, trim buggy tops new and repair old ones. Bring in yourold harness aud trade them for new ones, We have the largest Retail Harness and Saddlery Store in the Southwest and our harness are all wade at home. We also carrv afall lineof BUGGIFS, SURRIES, ROAD AND SPRING WAGONS McFARLAND BROS., Butler, Mo | Ps rene OAS wae Bates Couniy: Investment Co, | BUTLER MO Oapttai, 880,000. Money to tony vs rem! estate, at low cates, Abstracts of titie to ali land» and town lote in Kater county, Choiee securition alwaye ov laud aud foi sale, Abstracts of title foruished Gitier axamivued and all kinds of real estate papers drawn J Cyreanp Prealient. Jno. ©. Haves Anetracsor leticaebe VEGETABLE SICILIAN ALU ShHairRenewe A splendid tonic for the hair, makes the hair grow long and heav Always restores color to gray hair, all the dark, rich color rot youth. F Stops falling hair, also. Sold for fifty years. Uta rn my a BP. HALL AE Hon. J. 6. Niewesuky J.C. Ubaun, - Viee-Preaitane See’y. & Tress, 8 F Warnock Notery e 12 Gauge , Take-Down Repeater,

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