The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, November 23, 1905, Page 8

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Niece Uncle The damp, oe aE, ~ of Uncle —" should be deeply interested in what he has said about soda crackers, because they are the one food with which all of them are familiar. crackers are richer in nutriment and body-building elements, properly proportioned, than any food made from flour. ~ This is saying much for common soda crackers, and much more for Un soda crackers of the best quality. ‘They are baked better— more scientifically. ness and nutriment of the wheat, all the freshfiess of the best . baking, all the purity of the cleanest bakeries, Your Uncle Sam has shown what food he thinks best for his people. Uneeda Biscult the best of that food, nearly 400,000,000 packages having already been consumed. Uneeda Biscuit NATIONAL BISGUIT COMPANY aac 4 — —!" and Nephe . Sam has given out figures showing that soda eeda Biscult, because they are They are packed better—more cleanly. dust and odor proof package retains all the good- His people have shown that they think i <a Sf eee Ss \ Mormon Leaders Jump on Smoot | Salt Lake City, Utah, Nov. 20.— Reed Smoot is being subjected to hot bambasting by the Mormon apostles, They charge that he has disgraced the churct by bringing 1t so promt- ently into politics, and by his open practice of polygamy. Smoot says it’s not the Church, but the fact that the Mormon part won the city election in this city Tuesday that has caused the Apos- tles’ ire. Ata meeting of the Apostles today Smoot and President Smith hada hot setto. President Smith is said to have openly attacked Smoot for the lat ter’s course during the Salt Lake City campaign, charging Staoot with having placed his chureh on the de- fensive with relation to its own mem- bers, as well as with the outeide world. Smith is sald to have told Smoot that the latter’s political manipulations had brotight more disgrace to thechurch than anything the. had taken placefor many yeurs Smoot, according to ‘reports, re | plied by saying that Smith’s testi mouy iu ihe Smoot investigation in | Washinton, and his life of open pol -camy had aroused more feeling against the church than any thing | else. Mavy church leaders, who | have been draggedinto the limelight, to their great discomfort, as a result of Smoot’s political ambitions, join edin the denunciation of the Sena- tor. She Horsewhipped a Lawyer. Chickasha, I. T. Nov. 20.—Barrieter Washington, Nov. 20.—Diff-rences Stacy, alawyer, who came here aj of opinion exist between the Presi- year ago from Detroit, where he had | dent and his Secretary of the Navy been active in state politics, was | on the subject of naval extension. publicly horeawhipped yesterday by | The President has been urging the Mrs. Lucy Rothwell. Stacy made his ( necessity of a big navy and pushing home at the Midway hotel, of which | his views at times to a point where Mre Rothwell was proprietor, but} he could not get Congress to tollow recently found himeelf locked out of | him. Secretary Bonaparte is opposed his room. It is alleged that he was} The Secretary has decided to turn in arrears for rent. Stacy brought|down the recommendation of the Peg General Board, of which Admiral suit in the office of the United States Dewey is president, for the construc- commissioner, Mr. Payne, to get | tion of three new battleships. poasession of his property andeecure’} This plan was adopted by the Gen damages. Mrs. Rothwell heard that | eral Board tosupport the President’s Stacy had made remarks reflecting | k-o7n wishes. upon her and her hotel. Securing a Sickening Shivering Fits buggy whip, the small end cut off, | ot ague and malaria, fan be relieved she attacked Stacy last night. She |4n i cured with Electric Bitters. This approached him from the rear and | is a pure, tonic medicine; of eapecia' before the victim knew what was, benefit in malaria, forit exerts a true occurring she gave him five cuts on Curative influence on the disear, the body. Stacy turned aud got/| driving it entirely cut of the system possession of the whip. It is much to be prefered to quinine, : tired a atta Noes after . ‘ald 3 effects. E.S Munday, of Henrietta, | To Cure a Cold in One Day. | Tex , writes: “My brother was very Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUI-. low with malarial feverand jaundice, NINE Vabiets. All druggists refund till he took Electric Bitters, which the money if it fails to cnre. E. W. saved his life. At Frank T. Clay’s Grove’s signatareis oneagh box. 25 drug store; price 50c guaranteed, e comers ty, he Kansas City Weekly Star Is of special interest to farmers, because it prints a more any other paper in the cduntry. Serdi we fe -Five Cents for One Year! 8 Subscription! Abd ha mas minm Means Loss of Revnue. Jefferson City, Nov. 20.—Advices from Washington received were tu the effect that seventy-seven federal prisoners, confined in the state peni- tentiary here, will be removed to the federal prison at Leavenworth, Kan., on November 15. The loss of these prisoners will deprive tha penitentiary of considerable revenue, as the gov- ernment pays 30 cents'a day for the maintenance of each prisover, while the actual cost to the state is about, on.an average, 8% cents. her money, Mrs. Charlotte H. Weight man, 5859 Michigan avenue, told: . Judge Brentano she threw $15 000 of money and eecurities “into. the stove and watched them burn. The burning of the money and #- earities occurred shortly after her marriage to Charles. ae ocr a bookkeeper, whom she: has tenance, Disappointed, Burned $15,000. Chicago, Nov. 20.—Believing her husbeud bed married her only for Address, THE KANSASTC S , Kansas City, Mo. ; E complete ond intelligible account of the markets than ® The Great Paper of the Great West The Kansas City Star. Everywhere recognized as the strongest and most reliable news- paper in the most prosperous region of the United States. WHEREIN IT LEADS ITS UNEXCELLED NEWS SERVICE embraces ‘Prestdent and Bonaparte Differ. Jefierson City, Nov. 20.—Benjamin Bramley, 8 seven-year man from St. Louis, attempted to escape from the penitentiary ina box of kindling. Be worked in one of the shoefactories os a general office man and put in his spare time in preparing kindling, Which he threw into a large bor to be taken to the Gelske home. He managed to make a partition in the box with a door, which he fastened with wire from the inside. When the wagon came to haul the box away Bramley slipped into it and fastened the lid. The box was rolled into the wagon and hauled outatde the prison. The driver-stoy,ped to get someshoes to take down townand while waiting there the factory guard sent word that Bramley was missing. The box was opened and he wasfound. Brum- ley was taken back to the prisonand one side of his head shaved as a pun- ishment. Some time ago a convict escaped {n a shoe box and was taken to the Chicago & Alton depot, where his cries for help led to his discovery. He bad no means of releasing him- self and almosteuffocated. Brumley, by means of wires fastened to the door, could have released himeelf when the box was deposited on the ground. Agouizing Burns are instantly relieved, and perfectly healed, by Bucklens Arnica Salve. C. Rivenbark, Jr., of Norfolk, Va; writes: I burnt my knee dreadfally, that it blistered all over. Bucklen’s Arnica Salve stopped the pain, avd heeled it without a scar.” Also heala wounds and sores. 25¢ at Frank T. Clays, druggist. , A Wedding in a Cornfield. Des Moines, Ia., Nov. 20.—Under the soft glow of the November har- vest moon and in the middle of a field of several hundred acres of un cut corn, Earl E. Campbell and Am ber H. Stricklin of Cherokee and Ida counties, respectively, were married at midnight last night. The guests had assembled at the Stricklin home when Campbell suddenly remembered that he had procured the license tn Cherokee, while the wedding ceremony was scheduled to take place in Ida county. After a hurried consulta- tion 1t was decided that in orderthat no question should ever be raised over the legality of the marriage an adjournment would be taken to a high knoll upon the Stricklin farm, just over the county line, where the ceremony was performed. CABSTO Bears the The Kind Youflave Always Bought Signature eee 2 Mo. Pac. Excursicn Rates, Special round trip rate to Kausas City $2.15 on sale Saturday of each week. All trains leaving Batler alter twelve o’clock noon and all trains on Sunday, good to return on any train leaving Kansas City before noon the following Monday. Special West Bouna Winter Tour ist Excursions to Colorado, Seasou of 1905-06.—Tickets sold daily, Oct 1st, 1905, to May 31, 1906, to Den- ver, Colorado Springs and Pueblo, Colo. Bn 80 per han a Laster h a final ponte limit May al, 1906. Home Visitors’ Excursion, Oct. 10, 1905 —Rate one and one-third fare for round trip; final return limit 30 days. Tickets will be sold to various placesin Central, Eastern and Soutb- ern Illinois, vo all points in Indiane and Ohio, to various pointe in North. | ern Kentucky, N West Vir oe nia, Northwestern Pennsylvania, estern nn sty in Southern Ontario | and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoos aad? © Children’s GENUINE CASTORIA » ALWAYS The Kind You Have Always Bough In Use For Over 30 Years. ‘THE CENTAUA COMPANY, TY MURRAY STREET, NEW VORA Orry. Always Remember the Full N Laxative Bromo Quinine Cures a Cold in One Day, Grip in Two. ee oa County Investment Co, | BUTLER, MO. Capital, = = 850 00o°o.. Money to loan on real estate, at low rates, Abstracts of title to all lands and town lots in Bates county. Choice securities always on hand and forsale, Abstractsof title furnished, titles examined and all kinds of. real estate papers drawn, ee eer re ewe eres ¥.J. Traanp, Hon. J. B, New J.C, o 5 President, Vice-President, Beo'y. de ‘Treas Juno. C. Hares, Abstractor. 8, F. Wannoox, Notary Ra Pe SS 8 Big Reduction In Price-- ‘ ofall our wallwaper, Wehavealarge surplus stock which we must close out in the next 60 days to make room for __new fall stock. Don’t buy till yoneee our papers and get our prices We carry @ full line ot mixed paint, white lead, oils, tty, etc. cheaper han ai Bates ‘County. ee ee ee ‘BENNETT & HUPP. OUP GU gt a, tt And

Other pages from this issue: