The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, January 17, 1907, Page 8

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Food to work on is food to live on. A man works to live. to work. He does both better- on He must live Uneeda Biscuit the soda cracker that contains in the most properly balanced proportions a greater amount of nutriment than any food made from flour. Uneeda Biscuit NATIONAL BISCUIT. COMPANY For Better Railway Stations. To Relieve Fuel Shortage. Jefferson City, Mo, Jan, 7 —Rep- Washington, Jan. 14,—Senator resentative Crossley wants the rail- | Hansbrough, of North Dakota, sald roads to establish comfortable sta- | that the railroad compantes tions for the accommodations of | are making a very determined effort passengers awalting the arrival of | towards relieving the alarming fuel trains. | shortage situation in the northwest. Ina bill which he {ntroduced ft is / He said: provided that the company shall| ‘They are doing the best they can heat and light stations for a reason: | under the circumstances. They are able time before and after thearrival | seriously handicapped by shifting of trains. Fatlure to comply with | snow. The line may be cleared after this law will be a misdemeanor, | a week’s work and then the snow of meee | a night will blot out everything.” To Cure a Cold in One Day. | ‘The senator says his only fear now Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUI | '8 forthe safety of the numerous NINE Tablets. All druggists refund | homesteaders. There are 15,000 the money if {t falls to enre, E. W. | people in western North Dakota re- Grove’sstrnatureis oneach box. 25 siding on isolated claims. The deep snows of the past few weeks preclude Bishop M’Cabe Left $200,000. in coultine of travel tor these Philadelphia, Jan. 14.—The will of | People, and they cannot be reached Bishop McCabe, who died in New | by the townspeople, belng in many cases miles from any wire or rail | \ | | York recently, was probated here. y The bulk of Bishop McCabe's estate | communication. fa given to the American university ortega at Washington with annuities for 1 his wife and son. Thirty-two thousand ts given for church work. The value of the estate | fs not given, but {tis thought {6 will reach $200,000, Kat what you please and take a ittle Kodol for indigestion after ‘your meals. It digests what you eat. Sold by Clay’s drug store. Feels Safe in New York. Albany, Jan. 14 —Apparently as- Tete undigested food that causes sured that {ts practices in this state aourness and palnfal Indigestion. will be allowed to continue without Kodol For Indigestion should be |interference, at least for another used tor relfef. Kodol is solution | year, the Pullman company distrib- of vegetnble actds. It digests what | nted annual passes to the members you eat, aud corrects the defieloncles | OF the legislature this week. To of digestion, Kodol conforms to the z National Pure Food and Drug Law. | dodge the federal rate law the passes Sold by Clay’s drug store. read “Good only within the bound- arles of the state of New York,” and, The flood of “retorm” bills thatare | 60 avoid the state constitution, the being poured Into the legislative hop- | the passes ae made good for “Mrs. per at Jefferson City is enough to |—— and one.” The fact that some make the old timer think the millen- of the legislators are unmarried nium hascome, andevery two-by-four makes no difference, the “one will stateaman is trying to get in out of | carry them. the wet. If all of them would find their way upon the statute books, Missourt’s laws would present & ridi- culous appearance to the outside world and make this state a mighty good place not to live in. The old bluelawsof Massachusetts are daisies by the side of some of them. CASTORIA. Baars the 1a Kind You Have Always Bought Gignature of , —— The Angora goat industry has de- veloped remarkably during the last five years, and itis estimated that there are now in this country about 1,000,000 Angoras, distributed in all the states and territories, accord {ng to Bulletin 27 of the bureau of animal industry. The largest flocks are in Texasand New Mexlco, but the Northwest has also successful flocks, and no part of the country {s unfitted forthem. Angoras endure extremes of heat and coldand thrive on all kinds of soll except wet land. They prefer rocky lands covered with brush; by nature they are climbers and browsers. Their habit of brows- ing makes them valuable for cjear- |. ing land of brush. The chief value, however, lies in thelr long, silky fleece, which sells at 28c per pound, which is known as mohair. How to Cure Chilblains. “To enjoy treedom trom chilblains,” writes Joo Kemp, East Otiefield, Sure Cure For Consumption. London, Jan. 14 —Candy factories and sealing wax factories are the finest health resorts for consump- tives imaginable, according to a London physician. Both industries employ mainly women and girls who are invariably robust, rosy and cheerful. The candy girls are allowed to eat as much sugar as they Iike with an excellent effects upon their health. There is nothing like {$ to clear the complexion of sallow, yellow-skinned girls, Experience shows that the sugar eateris proof against con- sumption and it is Impossible for her to become a drunkard. All children ought to be taught to like sugar. It would do away with the vast army of consumptives and degenerates. Every person ought to eat at least twenty lumps of sug- ar dally. The rosin dust in the sealing wax factories makes the alr in them very stimulating, similar to that of a pine forest. It {s true that the workers in these factarles inevitably absorb with the dust particles of vermiliion coloring, which {s a virulent poison, but even this has a good effect upon anemics. Cured of Lung Trouble. “Tt 1s now eleven years since I had anarrow escape from consumption,” writes C. 0. Floyd, a leading business man of Kershaw, 8.C. “I had run down in weight to 135 pounds, and coughing was constant, both by day and by night. Finally | began tak- ing Dr. King’s New Discovery, and continued this for about six months, when my cough and lung trouble were entirely gone and I was restor- ed to my normal weight, 170 ounds.” Thousands of persons are ealed every year. Guaranteed at F.T. Clay’s drug store. 50c and $1.00. Trial bottle free. Dr.PRICE'S “gnBaking Powder ca ee aie geet be conception of any one who has not, used it. Tt will make your food of a delicio quality and a digestibility not to be obtained from any other bak- ing powder or leavening agent. But more important than all else, Dr. Price’s Baking Powder carries only healthful qualities to the food. As F burnt shim’ and sulphuric acid —the ingredients of all alum and alum- fe od ls the sordid and dull business of money- Interesting Wives of Sordid Men. Occasionally one comes in contact | with a number of ladies who are much more interesting than their hus- bands. They know more outside of making. I know a farmer and his wife, writes a correspondent of Mon- treal Herald, who hardly seem to live in the same world. The farmer is a nice fellow, but his interest in things is bounded by the fences of his farm, with a hazy-eyed look occasionally at party politics. His wife, on the can- trary, is an intellectual force in the neighborhood. She has made reading of the better sort popular within her sphere of influence; and there are few subjects of human interest upon which she has not formed an intelll- gent opinion. It is not that her ort- ginal education was any better than her husband's; but that she has had more time since to supplement it, or at all events has taken more time. In many cases it is opportunity which gives the wife the better education— the higher culture. The husband fs so busy manipulating stocks or hand- ling his business that he has no time or mental force for the sthdy of art, the reading of good literature or the cultivation of a musical taste, His wife, on the other hand,is put by his efforts in so happy a financial posi- tion that she enjoys considerable leisure; and she spends it on mental culture instead of taking an empty course of “afternoon functions” and keeping up to the latest thing in fash- ion and gossip. Europe is full of traveling tourist wives who are both interested and interesting, touching all that makes up the culture of that continent, while their husbands will only ‘run over occasionally for its curt- osities and amusements. For the vast majority who cannot go to Europe there is the home culture of the li- brary. No Good Definition of Death, ‘ests for death occupy considerable space in medico-legal literature, and yet they leave much to be desired in the way of certainty, There is aston- ishingly little evidence that anyone is ever buried alive, and even if true, suffocation would prevent regaining consciousness, The stories of suffer- ing revealed by opened coffins are merely old wives’ tales of stormy winter evenings when weird shadows were cast by the fireplace, but they have created a popular idea that bur- ial alive is common and that we must have a sure test for death. Yet there is no good definition of death, and we can never have a test for the un- known. To Loeb and his school, life of protaplasm is merely the total of its reactions as a chemical machine— a theory already venerable with age, but no nearer proof than it was 2,500 years ago. Res tation of those ap- parently dead has been fairly com- mon, declares the American Medicine. The startling thought has been an- nounced that perhaps they were really dead; that is, the body had ceased its activities and “team work” was end- ed. It was like a factory in which work had stopped, but the workmen were still standing around idle though ready to begin if the machine were started again. It needed some one to turn on the steam, or correct some defect or breakdown. By the treaty of Portsmouth Rus- sia retained the northern half of the island of Sakhalin and Japan the southern half. Both countries are now actively engaged in developing the island, which before the treaty was a Russian penal colony for the worst class of criminals. The northern portion of Sakhalin is said to have extensive resources in coal and naph- tha, the coal being fully equal to the best product of the famous Welsh mines. Japan has effected great im- provements in the southern portion, the resources of which, however, are not so valuable as those of the Rus- sian part. Winston Churchill (the American) at times has rather a patronizing way of expressing himself that grates on some ears. Not long ago he was shown some illustrations on which an artist, was at work, one being for a magazine. Mr. Churchill admired both picture and text and remarked: “I tell you the man who wrote that verse is all right; he will be heard from yet.” “That is quite true” dryly responded the artist. “His name is John Milton and the poem ‘L’Allegro.’” es? One of the scientists says there will be no blondes 600 years from now. But ‘why worry over a future that is 600 years distant? Prof. Cox is in London, but do not think for a moment that he has gone abroad to lay in.a line of imported weather. Evidently the man who put cycle ofl on his salad was the victim of the neurasthenic craze to go like greased lightning. : For Infants and The Kind You Promotes Digestion.Cheerful- ness and Rest.Contains neither a pe ees nor Mineral. iT NARCOTIC. Aperfect Remedy for Cons! pesca Teck Mirren Worms Convulsions feverish ness and LOSS OF SLEEP. FacSimile Signature of NEW YORK. 3) Dosis 3 Cints ‘ ‘ EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. 4 \ J ‘THE CEWTAUR COMPANY. HEW YORE CITY.’ Order of Publication, STATE OF MISSOURI, Share Wealth With Poor. County of Bat London, Jan. 14.—The Review of Reviews prints a striking article by | ™ \Cusnlt fours October term, 18 Andrew Carnegie, entitled “My Part | Mary A. Clymer, Plaintitt, ners, the People.” Mr. Carnegte ex- | James Licklider, Fannie Lektider, D presses the bellef that a millionatre | Now at this day comes the plaintis’ he ought to share his wealth with the Win nel aadacth, bites ng. ph poor, but with the limitation that | furt'ufiider are non residents oft his fortune should not be divided be- | Renn itis ordered by the Co fore the milllonaire’s death. ‘Then | #10 trent ie mneed a euttagstset cac » | this court, the object and general the community should exact a large | ye conte ee ei hearcesof part share, graduated in increasing pro- | following described real estate ly : eltuate in the county of Bates and portion tothe extentof the dead sourl RN ae ca . ‘The northwest quarter of the northeas| man’s wealth, | ter, of section twenty-four. (21) i ™ ‘ : forty-one (41) of range thirty-two After advocating the British grad: | jots waunbezed-toun( and ave a } t one (31) feet off of the west side of! t — a duties asa basis fordis three tn bck phat toa thee t i Mr. Ce r 8: dition to the town (now city) o! tribution, Mr Carnegle say’ Bates county Mo., and to if. ‘Such contributions from owners | spective interests of each of the ’ * | defendants herein, and to have of enormous fortunes at their death seribed p : among tl would do much to reconcile dissatis- reapretive interest and that un as | James 5. Lic le] ‘annie Lic! fied but fatr-m'nded people to the | snq apnea at this rt, at the ‘ta thereof, tobe begun an olden at ¥ alarmingly unequal distribution of] noise in the city of Butler, in said co ealth arising fri v . | the Ist Monday in February, 1907, and weet _ om the new Indus fore the first day of said term, answer| trial conditions of our day. We | tothe petition in said canse, the sa shall ultimately have to consider Selections. sibindaade®: as a progressive tax on all fortunes | WS#RLY Totes, a newspaper bublisly beyoud a certain amount, either eet, ase pak ee given in life or bequeathed at death, | day of said next February tezm of tht : so that {t will be impossible for the owners of enormous fortunes to hand no more than a “ertain amount to any individual.’’ Atrue copy from the record. hand, and seal of the circa [szau.] Bates county, this 27th ‘Js 1906. 8.M. BARK , 20-4 When theccld winds dry and crack Notes, the skin get DeWitt’s Witch Hazel | oP ictistration atom “the estate] Salve. Sold by Clay’s drug stor’. | Baldwin, deceased, have bee 7 the undersign Missourian Honored. Nevada, Mo., Jan. 14.—J. L. by ¢ , ance within one year from the date George received a telegram from | ter, or they may be } rscluded 4 Stot such catate, and‘! eld Austin, Tex., from his old friend, | hibited writhis two yenr2 trom the Ga, Hon. Thomas B. Love, in which Mr. | bared nt © tule Boe, eer ae Love states that he has just been | °* : : elected epesker of the lower house of the Texas legislature by a vote of 87 to 45. Tom Lovets well known In Ne- vada. Before hia removal to Dallas, Texas, Mr. Love was a citizen of Springfield, Mo., and during the ad- ministrations of Governor Stone and Governor Stephene he was a member of the asylum board at this place. ett = aes RHEUMATISM ~ and the Muscles and Joifif lubricated by using vt )_ Sloans

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