The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, October 26, 1905, Page 8

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Soda Crackers and— anything you choose--milk for instance or alone. At every meal or for a munch between meals, when you feel the need of an appetizing bite to fill up a vacant corner, in the morning when you wake hungry, or at night just before going to bed. Soda crackers are so light and easily digested that they make a perfect food at times when youtcould not think of eating anything else. But as in all other things, there is a difference in sod crackers, the superlative being Uneeda Biscuit a soda cracker so scientifically baked that all the nutri- tive qualities of the wheat are retained and developed— a soda cracker in which all the original goodness is preserved for you. Twenty-seven Chicago Gir!s Agree Not to Wed. Chicago, Ill, October 23.—[r: ing Park's debutantes have organized an anti-cupid elub, Twenty-seven maidens of the Chicago suburb have entered into @ compact not to marry or to be given in marriage All love is barred. Reference was made at the organization meeting to Presi- dent Roosevelt and his views on race suicide, One member propored that the President be made an honorary member, but this motion was lost a unanimous nay.” 7 Dire things are to follow all cases of apostasy. The initiation cere- monies are of a werd nature. Back sliders will bo dealt vith in a “very peculiar way,” the preanrble to the by-laws declare. Miss E.la Si-bold, who is one of the prime movers in the new club, has } decided views on questions matri- 1 monial, She saye: “Marriage is a check to independence and ambition and it is more than deadly to strong and eaduring{rlendships. When you are married you are friend to no one—you are a slaye ” Flirtations of all descriptions are forbidden to club members, The of | filers s+: Miss Ella Siebold, presi- dent: Mi-s Edith Joues, vice presi- dent: “ios Virginia De Muth, secre- tary; Miss Luella Gibbons, treasurer. Bar Long Sleeves For Japs; Modern Decree For Women. Tokio, October 23.—Reform in the costume of Japanese women {s begin- ning. The minister of education has requested that the president of the Women’s University prepare designs forthe new costumes. Three designs have been sent in, including one by Miss Smart, secretary of the Women’s Christian temperance union, in the semi-foreign style, which ie most highly favored. For several weeks four sewing teachers have been at work under Miss Smart’s supervieion, and many others are waiting eagerly to learn the details of the new costume, the popularity of which is epreading rapidly. The principal of the Wo- men’s seminary at Koyto has also requested patterns of the costume. It is evident that, at least in the costumes of schoolgirls, reform is in- evitable. It is reported the minieter of education says long sleeves must go. The change is regarded as of the greatcet cignificance in the educa tional, social and fashionable worlds. Sedalia, Mo., Oct. 23 —\re. Fred- erick Thompson, about 23 years old, was killed in the Missouri Pucific yards bere. ‘She was walking by the side of one ot the tracks when stepped upon the roadbed to avolda puddle of water. A coach that was Le Butler, Mo. There are two sorts of You know both; for you eell’em both. One sort looks better than it is, and the other is better than it looks, There isn’t any other sort, The same, two sorta of paint, no more; and we make ’em both—we innke tons of stuff that isn’t worth its freight. Belongs to the business —have to. Belougs to your business | —you have tu. But this is aside, We put into cane, with our name on, the very best paint there is in the world: Devoe Dear Sir: furniture. | lead-and-zine, It takes fewer gallon A Sedalia Woman Decapitated. : she | than mixed paints, and it wears twice as long as lead-and. oil. Mr. C, O. Brown, Columbia, 8 C, ! paiuted his house with Devoe lead- and zinc. ‘Tne painter, on seeing the quantity sent to the house, said there wasn’t euvugh. There were ten gallons left, when the job was done. Y urs truly F. W. Devore & Co. New York, Chiesgo and Kansas City. P.S. Gough & Hess sell our paint. ~ Letter to Mr. A. H. Culver, | Natural Gas in Nearly All."® Sedan, Kas., Oct. 28—With the single exception of Wauneta natural gas is now burned in every town in Chautauqua county. It was turned into the mains at Cedarvale in the extreme western part of uhe county this afternoon The annual fair {s in session there and the gas is being burne: at the fair grounds {n the presence of a large crowd. Quite a demonstration was made in honor of the event. The gus is taken to Cedarvale through a pipeline from the Osage nation. The line, which is fourteen miles long, supplies Hewine also. The Cigarette Law Stands. Lincola, Neb, Oct, 23.—Tae su- preme court gave decisions to night sustaining the constitutionality of the anti-cigarette law, the inheri tance tax law and the law to prevent desecration of the American flag The test of the cighrette law was made through & habeas eurpus pro- @2-ding to secure the release of John Alperson of Omaha, who was arrest- ed for giving away cigarettes. ODPOOS VOT 200 LOPES HEP RIT OO O00 —— Distinctively Different, In Every and exclusively its own. {t is issued twice every week. other ‘‘twice-u- ween” rs. Glol e Demoerat in an An entirely uaique wich is high) respect The two papers each week; Tu The Weekly Giobe-Democrat of St.Louis, A bi to ten large pages every Tuesday pe | Nothiog particularly different, you say, Yes, but the siwilarity end. there. Glob Demoorat in any other respect, No other paper equals the Teature of the Globe-D. a featur prized by its readers, wna hod of preserving aud preseuting the cou.tinuity of news. jesday and Friday, are carefullypre- Way the Best. covers a field peculiarly semi-weekly paper. Kight a Oue doliar a year, about that—there are No otner paper is like the is its systematic method of with the view of giving the compleie news of all the world ‘t week. Other bee telegrams of the day of i-sue. je “‘Twice-a- Week” Globe-Democrat every | in the week more compreh: Daily, of more value to the average reader. ” Globe-Dewocrat is not simply an Vt fo a separate and distinct publication, supply the requirements of people who want Moreover, the ‘‘T wice-a- W eek” echo: of the Daily edition. bg earth—e d somethin, ure, It presents the world’s lf is of equal interest in all parte o! alike to men and women, young and and complete in every detail. ; Ite de} devoted to “The Home,” ‘The Farm | Gusiry,” are such ond ell the eet of thei hiod and eltver ove i more then worth the sabsstiption of the oe ne In tos it is and pine the Remember the price only one than one cent a copy, You will no m They are so combined in th “ Pre y @ make-up as to form continued the various i the developements from day to day and oe teen resuite.” ene and twice-a-week papers, as a rule, price fr. ; strictly & bat it is allane a eee tr asa g eat National news and home ; prepai'. 5 you gend $1.08 today for a year’s eub- scription Or paper thont cost inducing twoot, your neighbors to subeeribe’ and’ sending thele Free copies, ing print onlya few ves the telegrams of ively than the average ly prepared to I the Sows of all the in concise but com form. It the > States. It is invaluable Ou ides for every member of the family. In high- Spartioularly Cascke lin masrees toperts scnourtens dollar per year—104 papers—less order, pon Will It Pay to Hold Corn? According to information just col-| lected by the Missouri Agricultural | | College, the farmer who puts his corn in acrib to hold it for better prices can count on & loss by next June of at least fifteen per cent. That is to say, leaving oui of account the cost of handling and loss by waste, thirty cents a bushel for, the crop now is bet- ter than thirty-five cents nextspring. This conclusion is based on the re- ports of careful experiments covering seven years and extending over & large part of the Mississippi Valley. At the lowa Station, for example, seven thousand pounds of corn were busked and stored October nine- teenth, in acrib built upon scales in order that the weight may be taken without disturbing the natural con- dition of storage. There was a shrinkage of nine pe for the firet quarter year, five per cént for the second, three per cent for the vhird, and two and five-sevenths per cent forthe last quarter. Theexperiment was conducted under the conditions that normally exist in this section of the United States and the results may, therefore, be taken as typical of thoee that will obtain on the aver- age Missouri farm. The Missouri College of Agriculture, however, does not a‘iviae farmers to sell their corn, but to feed it to some class of animals, thus returning as much of it as possible to the soil. Careful estimates show that where corn is fed, eighty-five per cent of it can be sent back to the field to pre- serve its fertility. Selling the crop means taking this eighty-five percent from the farm and thus, needlessly; reducing its fertility, } / in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of and has been made under his per. sonal supervision since its infancy, g Allow no one to deceive you in this, All Counterfeits, Imitations and “J are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment, What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare. goric, Drops and Svothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep, The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend, cenuinE CASTORIA Atways Bears the Signature of The Kind You Hare Always Bought ) In Use For Over SO Years. ‘THE CENTAUR COMPANY, T? MURRAY STREET, NEW YORK CIty. Rather than arrest Elmer Clayton, his younger brother, who is accused of robbing the postoftice at Salis. bury, Mo., of $159, Wm. Clayton, a constable in that town resigued his ottice. Always Remerbc’ “:¢ Keli Name Laxatives Wire (juinine Cures a Cold in Ge Day, Gripin Two. G. ae on Box. _25¢. ‘ | Mo. Pac. Excursion Rates. Special round trip rate to Kansas City $2.15 on sale Saturday of each week, All trains leaving Butler after twelve o’clock noon and all trains on Sunday, good to return on any i ee train leaving Kansas Vity before noon the following Monday. ! Bates County Investment Co, ' q Special West Bound Winter Tour- ' ; BUTLER, MO. ist, Exenraions to Colorado, Season | ' Oapital, = = 850 0CO. i ut 1905-06. —Tickets sold daily, Oct. Money to loan on real estate, at low xates. Abstract? of { 1st, 1905, to May 31, 1906, to Den- ver, Colorado Springs aud Pueblo, Volo, . Rate 80 per cent ofdoubleone ' \ ; title to all lands and town lots in Bates coanty. Choice ¢ | ’ perl fate always on hand and forsale, Abstracts of title | shed, titles examined and all kinde of real estate way standard rate for theround trip; , papers drawn, fl imi § . J. Troanp, Hor. J. B, NE . 3.0. tinal return limit May 31, 1906. , Fal onc} g A a OO Home Visitors’ Excursion, Oct. 10, | Sa0 Gs AER, Ate ieeaee 5. F. Wasmoox, Notary | 1905 —Rate one and one-third fure| “> raalaral for round trip; final returo limit 30 days. Tickets will be sold to various piacesin Central, Eastern and Soutb- era Llinois, to all points in Indians »nd Ouio, to various puints in North- ern Kentucky, Northern West Vir ainia, Northwestern Pennsylvania, Western New York, Southern Ontario and all_points-ia-Michigan, east of Lake Michigan. (IP ILAS SA SAA: Big Reduction In Price-- 6 Special Homeseekers’ Excursions, Oct 3rdand 17th, Nov. Tthand 21st, Dec. 5thand 19th. —To regular home- seekers’ territory in Arkansas, East ern Colorado, Indian Territory, Louisiana, Oklahoma, Texas, Kan vas, Nebraska and New Mexico. Rate 75 per cent of the standard one way minimom rate of $10 00; final return limit 21 days from date of sale. Home Visitors’ Excursions Oct. 10th and 24th, Nov. 14th and 28th. —Rate one and one-third fare for round trip; final return limit 30 days. Tickets will be sold to various pointe in Northern Missouri, Northern and Weetern Illinois and to all pointe in Towa, Nebraska, South Dakot North Dakota, Minnesota. Wiscon- ein and te all pointe in Michigan, west of Lake Michigan. J. F. Guicrr. of all our wallwaper. Wehavealarge surplus stock which we must close out in the next 60 days to make room for new fali stock. Don’t buy till youseo our papers and get our prices. We carry a full line of mixed paint, white lead, oils, glass, putty, etc., cheaper than any one in Bates County. BENNETT & HUPP. WE WANT YOUR CRAIN and will pay the highest market price any time you haul it in. Whether a 5 : BIG. CROP orgsmiil one, we can||handle it.

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