The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, May 10, 1906, Page 8

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Niece and Nephew of Uncle Sam 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. Uncle Sam has given out figures showing that soda 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 Yneeda Biscult, because they are soda crackers of the, best quality. They are baked better— more scientifically. They are packed better—more cleanly. The damp, dust and odor proof package retains all the good- ness and nutriment of the wheat, all the freshness of the best baking, all the purity of the cleanest bakeries. Your Uncle Sam has shown what food he thinks best for his people. His people have shown that they think Uneeda Biscuit the best of that food, nearly 400,000,000 packages having already been consumed, Uneeda Biscuit NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY CORWIN H. SPENCERIS DEAD) Aiwavs Reimer: ce Fall Name _— Dae .. e 8 axative jr Une Cures a Cold in One Lay, Grip in Two. (rs ee G. R- * oo on Box. 25c. —_—_—_—_—_——————— eo" Postmaster Robbed. G. W. Fouts, postmaster at Rieer- % ton, Ia., nearly lost his lite and was consclous while watching the ticker Sentenced to Hang . robbed of all p the wh according to s. that told him of heavy losses in Valdosta, Ga., May.—While the| his letter, which says: “For 20 Wall street. He was removed from| py J q, Rawlings was whistling a year I had chronic liver complaint, a brokerage office to the Planters’! yrothodiss hymn he and his bovs which led to euch @ severe case of hotel, wharveke eunanibel avasQ0 lc e 8 | jaundice, that even my floger nails Nese! 7 ‘~| Milton and Jesse, received news of! turned yellow; when my doctor pre- o'clock this afternoon. Physicians | 414 decision of the United States su- | scribed Electric Bitters, which cured sald death was due to uraemic| prome court which dooms them to | me and a 4 kept - ~y tor eleven poisoning, aggravated by indiges- | 4, h ft th ears.” Bure cure for billousness, Sion and exeibeusant. si _— lg pe euralgia. weakness and all stom- Mr. Spencer was known as the father the elder Rawlings had a feud, ach, liver, kidney and bladder de soca daca ahhat tal operator rangements. A wonderful tonic. At ost daring ecesstu “Tt | than tL expected,? in grains and stocks that ever lived a i } Frank T. Clay’s, drug store. 50e. ee. Unconsciousness Came to the g St. Louis Financier While Watching Stock Losses. St. Louis, May .—Corwin H. Spencer, millionaire, financier and speculator, is dead after falling un- Rev. J. G. Rawlings a : : . | said the elder Rawlings, as he stop- CARTORIA. in St Louis. He was credited with | 1.4 whistling, “How Firma Foun-| pearstte sha Kind You Have Always Bexght having won and lost several fortunes dation.” Bignatare atid at the time of his death was es- y ef Then he added: “It does not worry meat all. Iam tired of the whole business, »nd I meant what I said when I wrote to Governor -Ter- rell not to interfere and to let us be hanged.” Then Rawlings began to curse the newspapers, saying with few excep- tions they had maligned him atevery ‘unity, and that their {nflu- ence had resulted in sentencing to death his innocent boys. He said to pay for a year’s eubscription to that eg arte the Twice-a-Week Republic, of St. tions. He was a heavy stockholder ahd oa he other profes- Louis, Mo., and Farm Progress, will fn a half dozen ratlrouds and a ‘ sion. member of the St. Louis, Country, Noonday snd Commercial clubs. Mr. Spencer leavea a widow and four timated te be worth 2 million to 4 millloa dollars. During the recent slump in stocks it is sald he lost sev- eral hundred thousand dollars, hav- ing been caught long on Northern Pacific, Groat Northern and Louis- ville & Nashville. Mr. Spencer was one time president of the Mercantile Trust company | In 1896 he was president of the mer- chants’ exchange. He was first vice president of the World’s fair and was & director in maay corpora- GET THIS BEAUTIFUL COLORED PICTURE FREE. Splendid Reproduction, In Six- teen Tints of a Celebrated Painting. To Cure a Cold in One Day. of the Bride from the Home of Wash- Letter to Mr. Jas. R. Allen Butler, Mo. You know something | figure initis George Washington, Washington, May.—In view of the diffzrences of opinion between Sena- tor Burrows, chairman of the com-| Dear Sir: mittee on privileges and elections, | about the value of paint around 6 and some of the Democraticmembers | farm. It’s a sign of thrift as well as of the committee as to the method | a protection to property. The bet- ighl tations, fi costumes, Senator Reed Smoot, itis probable ; and the protection The Twice-a-week Republic te that an agreement will be reached | A farmer near Whitewater, Wis., on @ majerity report declaring mere- ) was going to paint his house; and it ly the Utah senator disqualified and | required $18.75 worth of lead and loave it to the fall Senate to de-| ofl todo it. Our agent, G. W. Sper- | The Republic, is vhe fastest-gro cide on the method to be used. in| beck, sold him Devoe lead-and-zinc | arm monthly in America, vacating his seat. ‘The matter will| paint; ten gallone cost him $16.00 | Ber. shat you ges bokb of Sleeos Friday, or she fires meeting there-|$1440 for Devoe paint against | one dollar. van of made @ carefal canvas of the Senate | the saving that he told all his neigh. pepe greta | rice Every person who sends one dollar receive, absolutely free a beautiful colored picture, 24 by 32 inches in dimensions, entitled ‘The Departure ington.” This picture is a direct re- hildren. Ki x oo, Be Re cedea Het = me production from the celebrated a : the money if {¢ fails to cnre. EB, W.|Palnting by Ferris. Sixteen colors Ousting of Senator Smoot Grove’s signature is oneach box. 25 | Were employed in the process. It is —< is a fos, heavy paper, and will make, when framed and hung, a to be Left to the Senate. magnificent ornament for the bonne. Aside from ite genuine artistic mer- its.1¢ possesses an uncommon {inter- est to every American, asthe central svanding at the portal of his Virginia home, bidding adiea to the bride ioe bridegroom, Thecolor work {a ornate and correct in every that should be employed to oust | ter the paint, the greater the thrift | detail, as are the agen Trepresen- \ the oldest and best semi-weekly family in the country, and Farm Freerens, which is aleo published by owing a. the be concladed atthe mesting next |and he had a gallon left; net cost: | beautiful big colored picture, all for A MOUNTAIN CLIMB ASCENT OF THE “MOUNTAINS OF THE MOON.” Duke of the Abruzzi to Make Attempt —His Former Successes—Pregent Undertaking Hazardous and Dangerous. In the heart of mysterious Africa uprear mysterious heights, a moun- tain range that has withheld iis secret from curious man, though many at- tempts have been made to penetrate its secret places, intrepid the adven- turers undertaking this mission. We speak of Ruwenzori range, in Centre Africa, up in the northeastern Congo Free State, When Stanley was :euu- ing the expedition for tne relief of Emin Pasha, a porter one day called out to the explorer as they were mak- ing their way in the torrid land: “O, master, see thé mountains covered with satt.” Looking in the direction indicated, Staniey for the first time beheld the mighty range of mountains which extend both sides of the equa- tor. Later he found that torrents from these mountains add to the vol- ume of the Nile, and believed here were Ptolemy's Mountains of the Moon, wherein tay hid the sources of 2 DUKE WILL MAKE HIS NEXT ASCENT. WHERE " the Nile. It is thesé mountains a fa- mous explorer of to-day is now mak- ing ready to assail, This explorer is the duke ef the Abruz- zi, who, though son of an ex-king, is best known for his success in the fleld of exploration, The duke attracted much attention in 1897 by making the first ascent of Mount St. Ellas, His north pole expedition, whitch set forth in 1899, attained the northernmost lati- tude as yet reached. Rt fs a lomg dis- tance from Alaska and the arctic re- gions to equatorial Afriea and the Ruwenzori range, for which he is soon to set forth, No litt Of the bagerd of this new enterprise lies in the exgpemes of tem- perature through which the party must pass. But let us take the journey in successtve trips, accontgany the duke on the various stages of the trip to the top of the Mountains ef the Meon. The base of the Ruwenaeri range may now be reached withowt difficulty, a journey by rail from Membaza to Port Florence on Albert-Nyanza, then a steamer in a day’s time brings one to north Entebbe, or Mengo, on the shore of the lake. Here,a caravan will be got together, and the mountains. on the sod says: ed that not dmous task: exhaust any but a pristely purse.” A way must. be hewn | made. frigid zone, and here will were not experts in snow ascents. peaks cf Ruwenzori havi 20,000 or 22,090. after. $18 75 tor lead and oll Present subscribers may take ‘ad.|1% Mont, ‘hres moni the Duke of Senator Smoot’s friends have| He was soplessed with the job and tage of this offer, ye ding ®) rica ‘and begin che auaphioeed? ‘Wher ‘ de® tad a@ ten-days’ march the party will be able to reach An intedesting-article in the New York Times commenting “at is expect- éss than 960 well-disci- plined men, such as may be procured in neighbering Uganda, under the su- pervision ot a score of white superin- tendents, will be requiyed for the ar- ‘Bhe work avill cost more than to climb one of fi higher Him- alayas, and unless the explorer leaves much for his successewg to discover, the bill will foot up 2 tem! that »wouid Betore the snows are reached the party must push its @ay tn tropteal heat_gnd amid tropiem luxuriance of vegetation, and this pertion of the journey may, prove tle most trying. through the bamboo forest for tke porters with their loads, and the, a@vance mdde in a steaming atmosphere, rainfall here being very heavy. A frmer explorer found his thermometer registered 115 degrees at an altitude of 5,000 feet. Desp bog lands lie bédween 9,000 teet and the snow jine, begs in which a man sinks te nis knees at every step. Then just before the smws are reached their uprise a rocky wall; to get.be- yond fmis line long detours must be Now the men ,erter into the probably spentis several weeks im their endeaver to scale the chiet peak’ and procure a map of the upper regions. The duke of the Abruzzi.will not be at the disadvantage of carly explorers who The highest ascent at any point in Africa is Kilimanjaro, 19200 feet; the been va- rlously estimated; Stan'ey held to be- tween 17,000 and 18,068 feet; Johnson put the figures comsiderably above, at Six early expiorers tried in vain to do what the ita!ian is now attempting: |. Lieut. Stairs, Scott Eldet, Sir. Harry }’ Johnson, Dr. Stuhlmaa, the mission- CASTORIF The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been 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 “ Just-as-good” 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 Soothing 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: Atway Bears the Signature of The Kind You Have Always Bru In Use For Over 30 Years. ‘THE CENTAUR COMPANY, TY MURRAY STREET, NEW YORK CITY. K. A. Bennett, W. F. Duvatt, President. Cashier. Homer Duvatt, Assistant Cashier. ‘What Secretary of State Says about our Bank. STATE OF MISSOURI, DEPARTMENT OF STATE, City of Jefferson. E. A. Bennett, Esq., President, Farmers Bank, Butler, Mo. Dear Sir:— ‘ Tam pleased to note the many excellent features of your business as shown by Mr. Wade’s report at his recent examina- tion of your bank. The absence of loans to officers and direc- tors and the small amount of past due paper are featares enti- ‘ Stled to special mention. ciates. We loan money in this way and at a low rate of interest. 5 -DUVALL & PERCIVAL, BUTLER, MO. Jan. 22d, 1906. Very truly yours, . JOHN E. SWANGER, Secretary of State. FARM LOANS, To be able to borrow money on real estate on long time, with the privilege of making payments before due, is an advan- tage which the frugal borrower appre- SWE WANT ; + YOU;RGRAIN: =~ and will pay the highest“mankat, hae ’ price ‘any time you haul it in, ther a

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