The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, October 12, 1905, Page 2

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— oan aa ca ae Sa EDUCATION AND SUCCESS. A SPUR TO LABOR. pC LLER WEIL: TiMl:p|How to Increase the SLLYLLLLLLLILLLISSL ASL, » ALLEN on 5 } Dr. Finley of New Y: i J. D, ALLEN, En:ror. Vaiue of the Corn Crop. NY L DIES’ Ny Stutisties Showing Former Is MUSIC IS ADVOCATED TO HURRY _ ee Te aw y Ag Itural Letter i \ Conduits to the Latter FACTORY WORKERS. TERMS OF SUPSCRIPTION: | Reports recefved in this office el 8 | a } } . ‘ Whether or not a college education is i he las days e that | Che Weexiy Tres, published eyery |'& th - tt i. : . lndic ny Rave S LN conducive to success is a question on British Employers May Adopt Plan Teareday, will be sert to any address the storms during the month of Sep- W | which men of learning and practical dabh tn Stien Mike Minsevetel tn ne year, postage paic, tor $1.00, temler caused a loss to thecorn crop LA E SUM | R business men have been at odds for Other Lands—Not Appli- lof thes 0 the unt of more years. It in fact has been the argument of # tate to the amc aay > }) a nD 4 a enable Bverywhere. pe Missouri Pacific Time Table at than 23,000,000 bushels This is a 7S: CRESS | of the self-made type of merchant that aa sia oe seenoeny Fas aga great lossto the farmers but asgrent & university mam is unfitted for a busi-/ yfusie in workshops and factories of y Butler Station. it is the tarmers may more then ness career. Dr. John Huston Finley, England is the latest plan adopted to ORRECTED TIS1E TABLE. as it is the farmer: 1H) HOES | president of the College of the City of quicken the labor of the working man pa cae aaa recover this loss by adopting better New York, however, has reached a def-' ng working girl, Ro, 2> Joplin & Southwest mall & Ex 5:18 am | methods in feeding the corn. More ST | nite conclusion on the cece berger he, Instead of the hum of machinery may No 20 K.C & Joplin & Express 12:30 pm "aes e h » bases on statistics provided by the state soon be hea: d in the streets of Sheffield > & Jopli il & Express 10-31 pm | corn is perhaps fed to hogs than any H " eard in the streets of Sheffie eee hope ether kind of shock. Patent Leather of Course board of regents, ‘and Manchester and Birmingham and NORTH BOUND. | According to Dr. Finley, one in 40 London, and other cities up and down the ity and St, Louts Ex.Satam| Experiments recently made at the a ; coliege-bred mea succeeds in life, while country, the strains of cheerful music ity ma and Expreas 12:3 v ™! Missourl Experlment Station show] ( We've some beautiful M7 j only one noncollege man in 10,000 has coming from factory and workshop. The LOCAL FREIGHT that the efficiency of corn is greatly new styles in i® ag = oe = a = plan has been tried with success in other > pigh 12:40pm]; . ‘ man. ese figures indicate the college jands and Mr. Budgett Meaken is now Be 22 Keneas Cig stock ispm| increased by feeding with it some PETERS’ jman has 250 chances to one for the non-/ saventing its adoption in England INTERSTATE DIVISION, other feed in order to ony iM — b9 | college man to win success, | with common sense and experience on Wee? nOTED. balance the ration. A recent experi: | g} v It is admitted by Dr. Finley that the pis side, mm eich sors ahaa seam ment conducted by Prof. EB, Y PAR EXCELLENCE PH | question of suceess in these statistics is Music, he claims, will enliven men and Ne, 42 Local freight ant Bas mixed ars:co pm) Forbes, shows that when corn meal PATENTS yy | pe arb ng am latectaak pte ten ped work, In Tangier he no- J.P. Gricen Agent 3 . , \ ticed that Spanish boys loy rere | Was mixed with oil meal at the rate! \ Y | “They have yale or not,” he says, “as eeutanes ealnes " ae oo Seventy two thousand dead Japs|of 5 parts corn meal to one of ofl fy Such standards are recognized as valid. when singing hymns, while they ‘were are among the costs of the war. meal {t required 876 6 pounds of the \ That are plendid for right now at , jane poe np gone they becomeactu-' ant to flag when working in silence. In , ion the ancestors of the | mixture to produce a hundred peuncs Sree Teeees Ce Saccees. a cigar factory in the United States he Whata reception the ancestc sehing aboet 10010 ’ Dr. Jacob Gould Schurman, president found the idea being carried out on more Mikado must be holding. of gain ses hogs ape aaa hate oo ) of Cornell university, is also of the opin- ' "i de to begin with. Where corn r e definite lines. In the workshop was a —_-———— pounds « . se ion that a college education is a vital piano, and at intervals a girl worker President Roosevelt has appointed | meal alone was fed it required 555.6] QJ : condition of success, | would be told off to play some bright Captain Fitzhugh Lee, son of thelate|pounds to produce 100 pounds of /@ And you'll be surprised ot they \ Prof. Arthur T. Hadley, president of | music, A marked improvement in cheer- General Lee, and Lievt, U.S. Grant,}gain, Where shelled corn only was gach eg would bef4 bag perpen lbedy bere pends df fulness and in the speed of the work was grandson of ex: President Grant, as | used {t required 693 2 pounds to pro- — L9 | ing convinced that persons whose names. waar aii ” said Mr. Meakin, “this military attaches and social alds at} duce 100 pounds of gain. Now ac-| @q nae AY Are contained ia & biographical diction-' igea is not applicable to every factory the White House this winter. cording to this experiment a farmer Y It you like pretty shoes come in and see them yy jay have invariably won success, |nor will any kind of music do, Work es who feeds 100 bushels of shelled corn | g anyhow. We want you to . : a 504 to define 2 song oe vel that requires intense concentration ; stractly,” he says, “You cannot reduce "might be hindered by it, but work of th The war department has Issued an | CAD produce 808 pounds bo ~ \ —0:— W | the matter to statistical information.” | more mechanical king such as dived order againet the enlistment of any|Counting the corn worth 30 cents \ Two Ameriean biographical works . and the pork, live weight, 4 cents the farmer's, profit in feeding the 100/% bushels of corn {s $2.32. Now sup- pose the farmer grinds this corn. Ac- cording to the experiment he will/@ produce from the 100 bushels, 1007 pounds of pork, live weight, at 4 cents per pound, which will bring him $40.28, Allowing 5 cents per bushel for grinding the corn, counting the corn at 30 cents he has made a profit on the 100 bushels of corn fed as corn meal of $5 28. Now suppose the farmer buys enough of of! meal to mix with 100 bushels of corn which will take 1120 pounds of the oil meal at $1.25 per hundred which will cost $14. $380 forthe hundred bushels of corn, $5 for grinding and $14 for the oil meal makes $49 for cost of feed. Now according to the experiment above referred to this amount of mixed feed (100 bushels corn meal and 1120 Ibs. oil meal) will produce 1785 pounds of pork, live weight at 4 cents per pound, and bring $71.40, makinga profit on the 100 bushels of corn after paying for grinding and for the oi] meal added of $22.40, or a net profit above what he received for feeding 100 bushels of shelled corn of $20 08. This would mean an {ncreased profit on the corn of 20 cents per bushel This data refers to hogs fed in dry lots and of course there would not be so greata difference for hogs fed on pasture, yet the difference under moet any condition that we might more negroes in the army, and the Washington, Post thus comments on the order, ‘“Thisis justanother step toward putting the army on a peace basis.” The Ben Davis apple {s 80 eagerly sought by purchasers and {s 8o well taken care of by its friends in Mis- sourt horticultural meetings that even so good an apple as the Jona- than knows it has been in a tight whenever it treads on the tail of the Ben Davis coat.—Republic, Malden, registered Nicholas Moore, an octogenarian this city. ferryman on the Wicomico river in : Maryland, was invited to take his first ride on a train the other day and refused, saying the blamed things area nuisance. Said he was83 years old, had never ridden on a train and never saw one, only at a distance, and didn’t care to get any closer. — The report of the State Laborcom- missioner shows that Bates county ab’ pped 611,384 pounds of butter tn 1904, leading any other county by more than 200,000 pounds. At twenty cents a pound, Butes coun- ty’s surplus butter brought $122,- 266.80, A very neat little sum to be placed on the credit side of the ledger. eee project. ees Anybody who has capital on which persons. Ee “He Rifled the Mails, | Glenn, Assistant Postmaster at this place, was arrested this morning by Secret-Service Agents Martin and McFadden on tie charge of rifling prisoner to jail at Jackson, Mo., and he will have a hearing before the new | Federal court at Capo Glrardeau, which convenes to-morrow, Glenn’s method, it is charged, was to remove a portion of the contents of registered letters, and in one in- stance, It 1s alleged, he secured $300 in this manner. The reported pecula- tions aggregate about $700. The Fai Portland, Ore , Oct. 11.—This week will mark the close of the Lewis and Clark exposition after a successf 1! Pe career not anticipated by even tke | Wherefore, it 18 by the clerk of ssid court in most enthusiastic supporters of the Before the closing day is over the fuir will have recorded an attendance of practically 24 million | Vested of all apparent intercst in, , packing, cigarette making, etc., would be distinctly benefited. estimated. In one of them, acyclopedia| “Take the case of an extensive ‘rush’ of American biography, there are more contract, which has to be completed than 15,000 names, Of these persons,'within a very short time. A set of -' more than one-third were college bred. | jancers from a popular con&c opera The other was a standard biographical | would set the hands merrily at work at dictionary containing 11,551 names of high pressure, but the strain would not living men and women in the United he noticed, for the same reason that dell- States, and of these 5,775, or 50 per cent. ;cate girls are able to keep dancing until have enjoyed a eollege education, while the small hours of tlie morning, Take 4,810, or 42 per oent., are college gradu- away the music and they would tire in ates, ten minutes.” There is much in favor of the plan, for EARLY MORNING SERVICE. it works like magic inthe navy. | A works manager recently sald: “Where a number of men or girls are working together in the same way I think a barrel organ might be employed with good effect, and even in an under- More than 200 persons, a few of them taket's workshop the charms of ‘Down women, occupied the pews of historic old , Among the Dead Men’ might make the St. Paul's Episcopal chapel in New York planes run more rapidly.” city when the first early morning Lenten service was held there the other morning at 2:30 o'clolck, Night toilers on news- papers published in Park Row welcomed the innovation, which made it possible for' them to attend at an hour that to them was seasonable, The vicar, Rev. Montague Geer, had feared that the ven- ture would prove afailure. Fifteen min- utes before the appointed hour not a per- son had entered the chapel, and he be- came anxious. First came a single at-! tendant, a white-haired man; then they began to arrive by twos and threes, and soon there was a good attendance. When the minister had read the opening service fe: he announced “Rock of Ages,” and there being no orgasist Mr. Geer himself walked over to the organ and made the chapel ring with melody. All present joined in. His address was short but interesting, and when his congregation was leaving the building more than one stopped to shake hands with the vicar, thank him and@ request that the services Eggs Taken Same as Cash. ‘ N were the basis om which the figures are Hill’s Cash Store. S Order of Publication. STATE OF MISSOURI, ; 88. County of Bates, In the Cireuit Court, February Term, 1905, In vacation, September 80th, 105, L, 0, Cramley, Plaintim, Mo., Oct. 10.—Elbert Vicar of St. Paul’s Chapel in New York Institutes Innovation for | Night Workers, va. ‘The unknown heirs of Charrick Courtney, Now at this day comes the Pr ae ae ’ in L. mail In the Post Office in Cramiey, by ble tiomney, ‘hos J. Smith. and " + | files his petition duly verified thi The detectives took their | plaintifr, wherein it is alleged. tuatelalee Tis the owner of, and southwest quarter of ’ has the title to, the @ northwest quarter of » township forty-one (41) in Bates county, Mo., those under whom he been in the ‘tual, open, moto- ossession of vena vo wo Gee. Tr more than » durlog all of which inder He Learns to Swim and Proves His Qualification—Wedding Then Takes Place, ep Agains| te, and that neither the defend: nor those an- +" whom they claim title have during said time up a y Claim to, been imthe jession of, nor paid ai aid land; that the plaintt: record title is imperfect 'n that said real esta‘e was entered by, and patented to, one Charrick Courtney in Fivrual '’ 4 but there is no record title of any deed of co veyance from said Cou hereby his in- terest in said ate ed to any per- son, That said Charrick Courtney has lovg since died intestate and that the Bamevot bis heire ‘re anknown and for that reason cannot be in- serted in the petition; that their interest in the subject matter of thi tis euch as they have = th pg ety ay y ay ‘880n Of the facts foresaid, and are derived by inheri' id Charrick Courtney. wrasse ny taxes against. Frank C. Bondurant, of El Paso, Tex., has won his bride. As an incident tothe winning he swam the Rio Grande at a point two miles above El Paso. His wife, formerly Miss Selma Wines, imposed the , condition on her prcspective husband one year ago, Panther Canyon, where the wedding ast was spread, was the scene of an exciting episode last St. Valentine’s day, Out of this episode grew the wedding. Miss Wines, with a number of Gtmer young persons, among» whom was Bon- durant, was saved from drowning by an- other man. Bondurant, to whom she was affianced at that time, was unable to aid, as he couldn't swim. When the ex- r Closes This Week. vacation, ordered that thédefendants be noti- fied by publication that the plaintiff rought his suit in the circuit court of Ba county, Missouri, returnable to the February term, 1906, of said court, the object and purpose of which said suit is to have the defendants di- or title to, said real estate; that the same be vested in the plaintiff and that he be declared to be the own- nd holder with the full title to said real 7 large returns are wanted can learn 7 something to his advantage by in- vestigating the subject of fruit can- ning and preserving in Missouri and the Southwest. We raise fruits and berries enough to set a dish of them on every table in the Mississippi Valley every day in the year, and be- fore long it will be done. EC eC”? pame will be sufficiently great to af- ford the farmer an enormous profit on & small amount that he might in- vest in oil meal. Gro. B. Exus, Secretary Board of Agriculture. Hughes Refuses to Run For Mayor of New York. New York, Oct. 9.—Charles Hughes, upon whom the R-publican machine attempted to force the nomination for Mayor, firmly, politely, but with- al, indignantly, refused the doubtful honor, and told the committee ap- pointed to nominate him that his potoh first duty is to the people whose rep-| d Tresentatives chose him to conduct the insurance investiga:ion, and that he could not occupy the dual posi- tion of insurance inquisitor and po- litical candidate. Reading between the lines of his very forceful epeech in reply to the committee, many discerned a note of rebuke to the politicians who sought to nominate him without his con- sent An Ouster Oil Suit Delay. Jefferson City, Oct. 10.—In the mat- ter of the order of Judge Fox requir. ing officers of the Republic and Standard Oil companies to produce books and papers and to teatify be- fore Mr. Anthony, special commis stoner of St. Lon’, — thec.u, « cult three years, ata levy of 15 cents on| of Attorney General Hadley for vio- the $100 asecssed valuation, and it/lation of anti-trust laws, & motion » fe a fact that a large majority of our| was filed in the supreme court to set Roti. te taxpayers did not realize they were} aside the order. r paying an extra tax, the amonnt| The motion alleges that the order ie ander was so insignificant, unless thelr at-|is in violation of the personal liberty |fesrng_& \ tention was called to ft. As astmple clause of the federal constitution and | Al Reraee owner in Vernon county can afford point will be determined by thecourt | Tae city council of Trenton, Mo., has been petitioned to pass 4 curfew law applicable to men. Under its terms the police would be authorized to arrest and lock up all persons found on the street@ after 12 o'clock at night, without a satisfactory ex- planation for being out at that time of night. Now wouldn’t that freeze you? What are we to expect next trom this puritanical wave which is sweeping over our country. The only hope is that the pendulum wont swing too far back when it has reached {ts limit. —_ large h farmin gatheri storin, it will other crop and use it. ishment of The court house proposition is again being ayi'ated in Vernoncoun- ty. The enterprising citizens of that splendid county should vote that much needed public improvement. Ifeach taxpayer was broughv to real- ize how shall the amount he would be compelled to pay and the big ad vantage and convenience {t would be to him aud every citizen of the coun- ty, he would not hesitate to vote for the proposition. Bates county’s splenc * .4....0use was paid for in bat ef blood. tions that 9 will The modern farmer is concerned w! rae acres. He treats his soil well @ has a system—a scientific side to his ons He | bg - a bes side. fo n who does things and knows why he does them is the om “ig top. Most farmers know that the reason that clover and all the relations of the | others interested’ in the estate of Caroline clover family are great restorers of fer- tility is because the: They enric! lown at the roots of multitudes of nodules are millions cua ay that the pees | and ic} wa) a @ plant ive it up to the H A An imitation of nature’s method of restoring waste of tissue and aed is used when you take an alterative ex- tract of herbs and roots, without the use of alcohol, like Dr. Pierce’s Golden Med- ical Discovery. This vegetable medicine coaxes the di [on nee th f th es from t ure essentia ealt! Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Disco cleanses the ities, making #ianis, with an abundant It thus pelas, boi sent free in paper covers on receipt of 21 one-cent stamps to * at slamps the " Admintatratrix’s Notice citement was over the rescued girl said to her admirer: “I will never marry you until you have learned to swim.” With this as a spur Bondurant has practiced diligently, and his triumph in the wedding tells how successfully. NEEDLE IN BODY 16 YEARS. nd that unless the detendants be and poral bags 4 yo ee aay of oe next of court to be begun the ‘city of Butler on the first Mon- 1905, on or before the first term thereof answering the petition end judgme St emnaet Ls rai tpporpece en | ndei ACEO) writin farther ordered th wom at «r ordered that a copy of this peti- tion be published in the Burisn WaexLy ‘Times, a weekly Lr al aie and pub- . be continued. The idea of hobting the early morning Sunday service {s his, and he would not have the initial service fail through any fault of his own. This is the first time such a service has been held in a Por- testant church in New York city. For several years mass has been said at the same hour in St. Andrew’s Roman Cath- olic church in Duane street. lished in Bates county, a! fer four weeks successively, the last’insertion 'to be not less than thirty Its Discovery Ends Illness of a New February Jersey Woman That Puzzled Physicians. days before the first day of the term, 1906, of this Witness my hand as clerk of oursaid court and the seal thereot. Done at (smav.] Done at office in Butler, in the coun- Pa Le yal on the 6th day of Ucto- '» 1905, J. A. KATIERSON, it Clerk. Cuas. M. B Lex, D.C, PIGGY WOULD A-HUNTING GO Lehigh County, Pennsylvania, Has the Oddest Substitute for a Hound on Earth. Mrs. Walter E. Smith, wiodw of a Prominent real estate man of Orange, N. J., has recovered a needle which has been wandering about her body for 16 Lewis D. Hollenbach, of Jordan, Le-| YS, Making its presence felt in an high county, Pa., hasa little pig that he uncomfortable manner in several parts n gath- | administrator of said estate, intend to make | {8 Willing to pit against the foxiest hound of her body during that time, Mrs. Smith, in 1888, after sitting on because | 40 settlement thereof, at the next term of] in eastern Pennsylvania as a rabbit 4 the Bates County Probate Court, in Bates! punter. Knowing that there was a rab- | ® bed which was covered with sewing Mlseourl on the Iith day of November ie: bit hidden ina thorn bush in. the| ™@terlals, was taken violently {ll and pneaid day or as soon thereafter asIcan de] oadow, the other day, Hollenbach re- suffered acute pain in the abdomen. leased plegy from the sty, and led the Later a mysterious malady affected ‘ her knee. Physicians were puzzled. way to the meadow, the little grunter For two years she was forced to use following as closely and attentively asa crutches. Then her ankle was a dog would have done. Near the bush “ frect the pig stopped, pointed like a hound, and grunted as if he were greatly ex- cited, when out of the bush darted the rabbit and made a dash for a ledge of rocks half a mile away. Then came the oddest chase ever wit- nessed in that vicinity. Piggy, with snout close to the ground, took up the n trail and closely followed the scent, e now leading his master across the meadow at a lively gait. Imagine Hol- lenbach’s surprise, when, at a large pile | of rocks, the pig halted, raised one of his fore paws and grunted with satisfac- tion, exactly in front of the hole in which Mr. Rabbit had taken refuge. Hollenbach now says: “I'll train that pene little porker for an all-round hunter yet, Can Now Strike for a Raise. if omy T can keep dovn bic wiigut,and| One of the Chieaco panks *-. on by careful feeding curb his appetite. If} cided that its employes must not get & pig can hunt rabbits successfully, why | married unless their salaries amount can he not also take up the trail of the| to at least $1,000 a year. This, remarks deer in Pocono mountains, and lead me] the Chicago Chronicle, will give the to the spot where a good shot will bring] boy who is in love a good excuse to down the finest of game? ‘I'll try him| strike for a raise. at it, sure’s you're born!” acteplimindnienen 5. ith and Notice of Final Settlement. Notiee is hereby given to all creditors snd one who reaches the Freeman, deceased that I, W. KE. Walton, are nit ese pla little nodules ‘and in these of small organisms And further notice given to all heirs and dis- soil, where some / tributes that J will on the like corn or wheat can find : Nth day of December, 1905, | apply to the said court for an order of distribu- tion of the amount fuunu to be subject to dis- tribution on said fins) settlement, acd fer an order of discharge as sucu administrator. Wu. H. WALTON, 50 Bt Executor. the tone kak Geen coe Recently she discovered the needle protruding from the leg and succeed- ed in pulling it out. Her health hag steadily improved. tei allem = Gambling Debt Repudiated. A 19-year-old Hungarian nobleman amed Dungerszky lost $60,000 at bac- arat in Vienna recently. Dungerszky’s family refused to pay the money on the ground that the elderly deputy who won the money should not have played for money with a boy who {is deficient in intellect, but paid the whole amount to charitable institu. tions. Notice of Final Settlement. Notice is hereby given to all creditors, and ali others interested in the estate of Wm. | ‘anoey, deceased, that we, Jehn E. Owensand o' H. rg pape! Se geet tend Make inal settioment ereof, at the n term o1 the Bates ten “in tive functions and hel; lation of food, or rather blood of tmpuriti the activit; FS blood: and it JOHN EB. OWEN anv W. H. DUNN, " 50-46 Executors. Notice of Final Settlement, Notioe is hereb: to all credi others interested Erne eatats of ‘Eaward or cr af aa ile Tid le final eettlement th: reof, the Bates County Probate in , State ef Missouri, as On the 13th thy ot Royemver, ia” 60-4 *" Rxeoutor, ted boo! ledical Adviser, af cost of maili cloth-bonnd vo e gen Address Dr. BR. V. term of coun: » Mis letters of ad-

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