The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, July 19, 1906, Page 1

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)

| *\, hinv of being both a lidr-and @ thiet. | tian'was allowed to return to court The Butler Weekly Times. VOL. XXVIIL BUTLER, MISSOURL THURSDAY, JULY 19, 1908. Habit-forming Medicines. Boston aiaee dou pega jMpsterren Wats facie end ha n Weman’s Home Companion, | 0! to-ca anges | The late; William F. Switzler of ie! broad! When women’s wrappers are paid at heen naan on more oF Missouri, had ie intimate acquair, for at the rate of forty-nine cents a peer jr vy ays beeen tance with Thomas H. Benton. A dozen, and silk waiste at eight cents atienton to this subject, i, Bas, in 0 writer in the Columbia, M»., Herald each, it {e easy to understand why | Most intelligent people avoiding such |saye that of all the moo Colonel even the help of tiny children must} foods and medicines as may be fairly sus- Switsler knew, he could talk per- . the injuri be called upon to earn a pittance for Brent complained of pita this hape the most entertainingly about the makers. Ifthe children can do t some time ago, Dr, Pierce, of Buffalo, Feed your hair; nourish it; _Y., "took time by the forelock,” as ig} Thomas H. Benton. The Herald P ; ; no more than thread needles or pull MX ik i broadcast all the |quotes Colonel Switzler ae baving|{ ive it something to live on. ous bdustings their assistance is clues are compova Thus he hus com: eald: “Benton wns a moet remark |p} Then it will stop falling, and Preclour; if they are Intelligent} pletely forestalled all harping critics and | qble man. In rome respects the|§ Will grow long and heavy. enough tu eew on buttons, or make] urge Rgelnst | his medicines, because they most remarkable | haveever known, | § Ayer’s Hair Vigor is the only button holes, their’ help is MOTE Pre | ae ee eee tited wa |bu® be could not bin acareer at|f genuine hair-food you can cious still. As soon as baby fingers every tottle wrapper, It will be seen that this time. The people would not|# buy. It gives new life to the can move intelligently, they play an| Other habit-torming dru Neither do tolerate him. He would impress! hair-bulbs. You save what eee ae pan te monte, thle frets bang” purely even @ stranger by his appearance. | hair you have, and get more, jabor of the household. Vouotal le, extracted from the roota of He walked as if he owned the earth.| tog, And it keeps the scalp Is seeme incredible, I know, to talk | medicinal p! wrorests and of | With head raised at an angle of 45) MRS, EMMA FLEISSNER Ly ayy! Over TwoYears—Health Was @ Precarious Condition—Caused By Pelvic Catarvh. Drew a Farm and Was Caught.) None Too Young to Toil. Paris, Mo., July 16.—Carl Wullace, formerly city collector here, who die- || @ppeared three weeke ago and was H | accused of defaulting, was captured at Great Falls, Mont., yesterday. He drew a farm in the allotment of the Crow reservation a week ago and was found by the publication of his name. Wallace is 27 years old, His alleged shortage was $468, which has been paid by his bondsmen ‘The sheriff will return with hie prisoner ‘and twenty young men of thin place have already made preparations to furnish the bohd required, which fe $1,000 No School Land Leases Yet. depths of our American forests and clean and healthy. Guthrie, Ok. July 16.—Mr. Wen- of Be infant vi rae pro well recognized curative virtues, aman | 2°6rees and hands behind his back The best kind of a testimonial — 4 | Der, secretary of theschool land leas- One Some may Ng the ment portions long continued, as in obstinate he would etalk with measured tread Sold for over sixty years. that euch little ones do work as a} cases of disoases, becomes highly objec-|down the street, looking nelther to CON TCA TT tod , Made by J.0. Ayer Co., 5 sensational exaggeration. But it is mavioe free eee e, Phaxee sue. | the right, nor to the left, recognizing aici yg rte SARSAPARILLA, literally true, as is proved by the| ploys chemically pure, triple- refined |no one, Ifthe had an appointment > PILLS. ine, which of itself is & valuable Yy PILLS, | testimony of witnesses of unimpeach- | Scorn". many cases of chronic diseases, | to speak at 2 o'clock, promptly at 2 er. > CHERRY PECTORAL . ive. |0’clock he would arrive. He would —e - t, antiseptic, abecararter. "A baby 3 yuare old] Si" sper al | lock be oa can straighten ous tobacco leaves or} It en ances the curative action of the! come in his carriage unattended. He stick the stamens of artificial flowers | Geen eal ott sone contained in| Would permit no one to introduce Champion Pothook Man. through the petals. A child of 4 can ME itch nok ites receen arena him. But, passing through the Freed the Brooklyn kagle, put the covers on paper boxes, or) with severe coughs. As will be seen from | crowd, he would made his way tothe| Fred Irland, official reporter of de- even help paste them. A child from Ee, writings of ihe seinen: D rs, Grover | rostram and begin, ‘Citizens.’ Never} bates in the House, went over to 4 to 6 years of age can pull out eson Medical College, Phila.; Scudder, of did he say ‘Fellow Citizens.’ Those} Baltimore a few weeks ago and won bastings and sew on buttons. Al FoMiit agorand others, who stand| before him were no fellows of his,| the champtonship of the world in a child of 8 can make artificial flowers as leaders, tn une eeYore. sonnae pt | And when he hadconcladed he would | shorthand writing speed contest. It almost aa well as an adult, and can} Den/‘icw ihgredients’ that Dr. Plerce|make hie way back to the hotel,| was the fires contest of this kind make paper bags just as well, and/ could the cee fo make up his fa’) without personally addressing a|held in the United States elnce the almost as quickly, Many a girl] only bronchial, throat and lun affec: soul in his audience. No one dared | one at Lake George, eighteen years from 8 to 12 years old can finteh| {Hons but also of chronic catartt In 8 interrupt him in hie epeech. He re-| ago, when Mr. Irland established his boys’ “knee pante” as well as her fured to recognize the right of any | superiority over all comers, mother. In our greatest and richest Villainy a la Mode. constituent to ask himhow hestood| In the Baltimore champfonship city, babies who should be in the B. A. Rossin the July Atiaatie, on any subject,” contest only four aspirants entered, ing board, said that no arrange- | | ments have been made for the leas- ing of the 1,050,000 acres ofland se- lected by the echool land board for the colleges under the statehood bill, The board has not had time to con- sider the matter of leasing these lands. Many cattlemem have asked leases and several applications have been received to colonize them. It will bea month or more before the selections made are approved by the department at Washington. After the approval the question of leasing will be considered by the board. The Whisky is Good Now. Vermilion, 8. D. July 16—The steamer North Alabama, which “HEALTH AND STRENGTH RESTORED BY PE-RU-NA. Mre. Emma Fileissner, 1412 Sixth Ave., Seattle, Wash., Worthy Treas- urer Sons of Temperance, writes: “1 suffered over two years with ire regular and painful periods. My health wasinavery and 1 was anxious to find something to re- store my health and strength. “I wae very glad to try Peruna and delighted to find that 1t was doing me | Struck @ snag and eank,!n 1870 six! kindergartens have been compelled one of them having been imported good. T continued to usp it little over | miles below here, reappeared on the!to work in such occupations as 1| _Primitive-minded people abhor the Obituary. trom Chiswick, London, for the three months and found my troubles re- | surface of the Missouri.siver. The have described, and others of a like wrong-doer, not froma sense -of purpose of giving few pointers in shorthand work to his American courins, The competition proved a walk- over for Irland. The test consisted of a five minute reading from. the Congressional Record at a epeed of more than 200jwords aminute. The contestants were then locked into separate rooms and told to trane- cribe their notes. Irland had written threefourthe of his ‘‘take” when he was notified that his threerivals had thrown up the sponge. finding it {m- moved. “1 consider It a medicine |00%* Was bound from Sioux City to end shall never be tt, taking a |the Yellowstone diatrict with flour dose commelonas when ! feel rune jand whisky. Itis supposed a change woo roby thousands of testi- |! the current washed away the monials which Dr. Hartman has re- /earth deposited above and around ceived from grateful, happy women |the boat, allowing it to rise again. who have been restored to health by There were fifty barrels of whisky Nee eureeemmennn abated and a hunt has begun to Al find the liquor, which has had thirty- DR.J. M. NORRIS |+:seectcccn SPEC ALIST Remembers His Old Neighbors. a Coffeyville, Kansas, July 4, 1906 Editor Butler Timzs, ON THE EYE, EAR, NOSE Butler, Mo., Dear Sir and Friend:—Pleage find AND THROAT. enclosed $1.00 which {s due you. Pree i This is, I believe my 25th year for ntion your paper. A letter from elther of the Bare es, — SROm my two daughters is not mure close- Those in need of Glasses can have | /¥ perused than Tur Times, for! read Sages tested free, and properly fit- | the items and see the names of so danger, but out of sympathy with) Pierce Connal Willlame was born his. victim. Thisis why our mobs}in Sullivancounty Mo., May 3rd lynch for murder, assault, rape,| 1851, died July 10th 1906, aged 55 arson, wile-beating, kidnapping, and| years, 2 months and 7 daye. Oct. grave-robbing, but passes over such | 99 1885 he was united in marriage impersonal offenses as peculation,| with Mre Mary J. Englet; two chil- adulteration, rebating, ballot fraud, | dren were born to this union, one of bribery, and grafting. The public,|shem dying in infancyr He leaves a While lees feroctous shan the mob, {8/ wife, one son, two sisters and two nearly as sentimental. It needs | brothers were gathered around his victim to harrow up ite feelings. |death-bed. One of them arrived too Villainy must be staged with blue} iate for the interment which took _ and ~ —_ The gg place at the Round Prairie Baptist that {s problematic, or general, oF/ church, of which he was a member. ji shat falle in undefined ways upon| Ho professed talth in Christat about | Powe correctly to read. sheir unknown persone, ls resented feobly, twenty years ofage and has since eript ‘ot his wh wien City, 9 years old; Clara Usher 16/08 nos atall. The flend who should|itved @ devout christian life, He a when Ati found that he had yoare old. \ rack his victim with torments euch} was a kind, affectionate husband average d 206 words per minute, Ruth Kiersey, the only survivor, as typhoid inflicts would be torn to] and an indulgent father. Tce was cate a 7" sald they were wading when Lucille Levy bine villain who should saint) Funeral services were delayed but Irland who iséundcubtedly the fast- Sweeding slipped off a shelf in the} i# enemy’s cup with fevergerms| wit] be held at tbat church Sunday, ‘ “4 est writer on earth. When he won river bottom. Maz | Sweeding rueh-|WUld stretch hemp. But the cor-| July 22, conducted by Rev. Ewin. the world’s champlonehip at Lake nature. Six Died Trying to Save One. Cedar Rapidg, Ia., July.—Eight lit- tle girls at a picnic on a river bank only three blocks from home went wading this afternoon. The smallest one slipped into a deep holein the river and In trying to rescue her efx others were drowned. The dead are: Lucille Sweeding, 7 years old; Hazel Sweeding, 14 years old; Gladys Sweeding, 10 years old; Joste Sweed- ing, 12 years old; Ruth Coyle, Sioux City, 11 years old; Cora Coyle, Sioux many people I know. Hurrah for| 4 after her and so they kept trying | *UPt bose hag be aa fat AFREXD. | George in 1888 be maintained on Office on the South side, over El-/Dan Embree and the whole ticket|*® 8@ve each other until all of the oe ie t1d{ ae" 7 ‘ration average of 260 words a minute for a mer Dixon’s store, and W. J. Bryan in 1908. Ahappy|Sitle except Ruth Klersey had _ wf = el , Ae Hage No Peek-a-Boos period of five minutes, or about four Office hours from 9 a. m. to 4 p.m. | 4th of July to Bates county friends|4rowned. She then ran home and . ; : wl yarsting r ne y At Campmeetin words per second for 300 seconds. - and youreell. gave the alarm. yes the Sag betd snonnge, and thee. p a Not one person in @ dozen can read Four of the bodies were quickly re- by doome twelve hundred of his Macon, Mo., July 16.—The follow- covered from the water. At4 o'clock townspeople to sink to the tomb/ i.) oficial warning was published in oo all of the bodies had been recovered *hrough the flaming hell of fever,’ ++. Chorch Herald tor the guidance! The Simple Life For Docker’ except that of Clara Usher. *comes off ecathless, of the those attending the feast of P y = the tabernacles at Callege Mound, Gallatin, Mo., July 16 —Theee are Shot to Death By His Sister. Macon County, Aug. 2 to 12: restful days for Alexander M. Dock- Kansas Boys Come to Grief. Seattle, Wash., July 16—George| “Please do not les any young| ery. The once chief executive spends Salina, Kas., July 16.—Thelark of | Mitchell, who recently shot and kill-| ladies cometo thecampmeeting with | most of his time about the hotel tn three Kansas youths ended when|ed Frau: Edmund Creffield, the sojarms and necks exposed by thin | Gallatin, talking with his oldfriende, Sheriff Meyer arrested them in Hill jcalled “Holy Roller” prophet, and sleeves and waists. It seoms tmmod- | enjoying an occastonal social func- City and brought them here. The | was acquitted on a plea of {nsanity, /est and unbecoming enough to wear | tion and leading the eimple life gen- boysare Earland Harry Van Bib-| was shotand killed by his sister/such garments at home, where no| erally. Recently the ex-governor attempted to snatch them. Judge|pber, 18 and 14 years old, of Kansas | Esther in the Union depot here this! one sees you but your father and | bought a tract of ground near tal- Mullins held the attorney at. arm’s City, West Gide, and Charles Davis, | afternoon. brothers.” latin and gave {t to the city for a length, then-called offteers, and had|16 years old, of Moreland, Kas. The| Esther Mitchell joined the “Holy| Jewelry of all sorte has long since| park. Thecity council has named him taken to the county jail. Whit-| youngest boy orled for his mother | Roller” sect in Corvallis, Ore., and| been barred by the Holiness people, | it “Dockery park.” The former gov- when arrested and told the sheriff}wag oneof the most fanatical of| but thie is their firat proclamation | ernor has declared that he will build all about thelr escapades They | Crettield’sfollowers. When her broth- against “peek-a-boo” shirt waists|@ fine road from Gallatin to the emashed the windows of the Shipton |er pursued the leader of the “Holy | and arm exposure. park and that he expects to spend railroad station, stole cigars and}Rollers” to Seattle and shot him —_—_—_——_. most of his time the rest of the sum- ___Iremainete, , Zach Johnson, Grabbed at a Judge’s Papers. Denver, July 16.—Clay B. Whit- ford, an attorney for the deposited county officials, was sent to jail for contempt by Judge John I, Mullins. Whitford made a demand for papers which the judge was reading. He was reprimanded, but persisted, and aloud at that rate. From the Boston Herald, Thomas B, Reed, while serving as chairman of a committee of South- etn congressmen, had been having the greatest difficulty in convincing them of the unreliability of certain evidence that had been given before the committee, until he appealed to their humor with. the story of a ‘Bouthern gentlemen who, having had some difficalty with one of his servants, had called him into his stady and told him that hewas very sorty, But he should havé to’ aecus® Whereupon the servant, with a/|/ater. His apology was not accept ‘broad grin, replied: “Wall, masea, |¢d, but he was released. Lepece I is @ Har, but Tee no thiet.” re went away with a horse and buggy | down on the street he pleaded in jue- If the Pri uri, | ™er thus engaged. There are fine which they traded for another. ve-| tification that Creffield had deluded Halt the Prizes to Misso thoroughfares Dockery built in hice. They came here to work in| hiseleter. George Mitchell was ac-| Lousville, Ky., July 16 —Thecom-| Daviess county when he was road the wheat fields, GQisted of she charge of murder mittee on awards has announced the | boss. Treeday, and nearly all of the fol- | prit2s connected with the home-com- “Tho he spent in searching for|ing celebration. Medals will be} A Fatal Missourl Runaway. Survives a Lightning Stroke, [lowing day be pent searching form mloneeioe , | Freskt Kas, July 16—Miss| Left state at tenderest age, Mary Nevada, Mo., July 16.—Mies Ethel Anns O’Brien, a young women ly: Two Killed By Lightning. | Alice Beker, 8709 Finney avenue,| Holcomb, daughter of A.B. Hol- OU tne near: * : 8. Lous; left state at most advance: | ©°™b, who lives near Ellis, this coun- on.) po eg ll ng dager te cae » Hennessey, Ok., July 16.—Two ed age, irs. Mary A. Medcalfe, Mar. | *7: was thrown from thebuggy while » om tn the yard when a bolt faen wore killed and four others {n- low, I. T.; absent trom state longest | <°lng home and inetantly killed. standing Bi ys near her.’ She was {tere : %/ without returning, R. H. Smith, | Miss Fulkerson of Texas, who was meeing vtreck ‘that she tell t0 the |S Henneeney, Boone county, Mo.; traveled longest with her, was not injured. The horee Roy Brown, @ farmer, were the : Wietime. With the four others they nj | 800k shelter ina barn loft during a storm. None of the injured distance, James D. Gardner, Mel-| became frightened and started to bourne, Australia; nearest kin to|F02@way. One of the lines broke Dantel Boone, Miss -Mattie Hender- |®94 Mies Holcomb was unable to eon, Fulton, Mo; most aged Ken. | bold the horse, ; tuckian, Gordon Boling, Windsor, -—— —_—_ \ Has. Stood The Test a5 Years. Il. 8 “a i A Guaranteed Cure For Piles ‘ “Ptr eae See to money if PAZOOINTMENT fala to curein 6 to 14 days. 506, 2 ee aie

Other pages from this issue: