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Work! Work!! Work!!! Lots of energy is needed to keep up the pace. In the struggle, the man with the strong body and clear brain wins out every time. The man of to-day needs something more than mere food; he needs a food that makes energy—a food to work on. Although some people may not realize it, yet it is a fact, proved and established beyond doubt, that soda crackers—and this means Vneeda Biscult—are richer in muscle and fat-making elements and have a much higher per cent. of tissue-building propertics than any other article of food made from flour. That this is becoming known more and more every day is attested by the sale of nearly 400,000,300 pack- ages of Umeeda Biscuit, the finest soda cracker ever_baket, An energy-giving food of surpassing Value—sol’ in a package which brings it to you with all the or‘ginal flavor and nutriment perfectly pre- served. Truly the food to work on. Whoever you are—whatever you are—wherever you work—Yneeda Biscult. NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY Order of Publication. STATE OF MISSOURI, 88. Posters. i Things are looking up for the boy who got skates and usled for Christ. mas Cured of Lung Trouble. “Tt is now eleven years since I bad anarrow escape from consumption,” writes C.0. Floyd, a leading business man of Kershaw, 8.C. “I had ran down In weight to 135 pounds, and | coughing was constant, both by day and by night. Finally T began tak ing Dr. King’s New Discovery, and, continued this for about six months, | when my cough and lung trouble: My | were entirely goue and I was restor | plaintiff has comin ed to my normal weight, 170| this cooky the (0 pounds.” Thousanda of persons ure | following ¢ healed every year, Guaranteed at paket tag PT Clay’s drag store, 50¢ and) $1.00 Trial bottle free. County of Bates. In the ( ireuit Court, Novy, lth, 1006. Mary A. €lymer, Plaintiff J Charity covers too many sinners. j f } ' ’ wa They'll never work if you keep ‘em attorney, Harry Clymer, titlon and affidavit, ng too warm. After whole hog” w Fannie Li all, going ‘the of Missour' mgo woman it wasn’ hen aCh pet pigs. defendants wave | Joa of being comfortable entry geomething it makes bis Am of Bates and § is we wify mad to have him seen in. y-four (24) In (il) of range th oe oa feet off of the west in block number th n (now city) of iw man has refused a} »natorship, and he’s mu- A Del Unit too rich to desi witi the dime isuates Smallpox and Fever Epidemic Over State. Springfield, Hl, Jan, 21.—Small- | | pox and scarlet fever are causing much alarm to the State Health | authorities, as the diseases appear | to be sprending rapidly throughout Illinois. The latest reports to the State Board of Health show that many cases of smallpox exist ot widely scattered points throughout the State, and inspectors ara being dispatched to the various points to assist the local authorities in com- bating the disease. Among the points where many | epe seums | defendant hong the re A beauty expert “No one who ests much meat ean be per munentiy healthy or beautiful.” A bulldog might not capture the blue ribbon for prettiness, but the most of them look as healthy aid hearty as if made out of cast iron, 4mye: and ay ear at this conrt, the lat Monday in February, 1007, fore the first to the petition in said cause, ered accordingly. ‘And it is further ordered. county of Bates for published at least once &® we tion to be at least thirty di day of said next Fetraery te The city young lady who went to the e untry and picked s bumble bee by mistake for a blackberry had no more painful a reallz ation of her error than the backwoods legislator who expects a brass band and torch- A true Reis iS (szav.] Bai 8 county, thie 27th da’ 16, AS. 20-4 a term, 1006, v Licklider, Fannie Licklider, Defend- this day comes the plaintiff herein, by and files her pe- among other thinge that defendants, James 5. Licklider and klider are non residents of the State srenpon, itis ordered by the Court that ‘otified by publication that da suit against them in andgeneral nature of lecree of partition of the al estate lying and being te of Mis- northwest quarter of the northeast qv 1 tow two (32) and nbered-fonn (4)and five (5) andthirty- of] t number 3)ot Page’s ad Adrian in eaid . and to have decreed the re- of each of tee plaintiff and erein, and to have the above scribed preimiges sold and the proceeds divided tive parties according to their rests, and that unless the ,said ider and Fannie Licklidér be at the next term thereof, tobe begun and holden at the court house in the cityof Rutler, in eaid county, on and on or be- ‘ay of said term, answer or plead the same will be taken as confessed, and judgment will be rend- that a copy hereof cording tc law, in Tas BUTLER a newspaper published in sald four weeks successively, , the last ineel before the fir m of this court. HAS. M. BARKLEY, Cireuit Cle: from the record. Witness my and seal of the circuit court of 7 of Nov. BARKLEY, Circuit Clerk, pub- | A Europea i | lished carefully prepared figures of longevity which tend to throw a rather re light on the rela- tion, first of pr ss, and secondly of climate, to the duration of life. It would appear that Germany, with a population at the time of. 65,000,000, counted less than 80 centenarians, oF in the ratio of one to 700,000; that the ratio is lower still in Denmark, where it is one to 1,250,000, and in Belgium, where it is one to 1,350,000, but that it rises in Sweden (1:600,000), Eng- land (1:260,000), France (1:190,000), Norway and Scotland (1:100,000), and Spain (1:405,000), till it attains an as- tounding height in the Balkans, where Roumania can show one centenarlan for every 5,000 inhabitants, Servia for every 1,000. The obvious deduc- tion would be that climate is evident ly a powerful factor in determining the length of life, and that the Medi- terranean countries enjoy especially fayorable conditions In this respect. The vegetarian should also have his innings here, for it is the oil and grain-eating peoples of the south that seem to have approached nearest to the secret of immortality. It Is in certain parts of the Balkans that Elie Metchnikoff found old age to flourish, and ascribedsit largely to the prevail- ing diet of fermented milk, But it ts also obvious that centenarianism varies inversely with the scale of civilization, There is, however, the cheerful reflection that longevity also seems to vary inversely with the seale of literacy, and that perhaps statistics in Servia are not kept, 80 carefully as in Germany. Tchaikow- sky's music may not be the only me- dium in which the Slav imagination utters itself. ——— A New War on Opium. The Chinese government has fol- lowed its recent edict against opium by stringent regulations which seem to show a sincere purpose to do all that can be done to suppress the use of the drug in the empire. The regu lations provide that not only the cul- tivation of the poppy but the use of opium shall cease within ten years. No new ground can be placed under cultivation for opium production, and the ground now under cultivation for that’ purpose must be reduced one- tenth annually under penalty of con- fseation, Petsons already addicted to ithe use of the drug are required to use an annually diminishing quantity, and all persons are forbidden to begin its use. Officials are especially en- joined to set an example of absti- The importation of morphine nence. de- ten years. will be strengthened by the drug, which finds frequent pression in the Chinese press. eneeeenemmmnmmmmntany Ghastly Facts About Lynching. tographs of a lynching sense of abysmal horror. the tragedy. Nght procession to meet him when he comes to town. The professor’s wite—Bobby has been very naughty, my dear, and you must whip him at once. The professor (wearily )—Must itbe done? “Yes; I gave him his choice—get- ting whipped or going to hear your lecture.” al = vice to those who suffer with lame Mr. Hill—Mies Short—Ieabel—you back and kidney trouble,” says J. R. have been in my office for two years, | Blankenship, of Beck Tenn. “T have now, and I have learned to love you Tae toan absolute certainty that better every day. Will yoube my lectric Bitters will positively cure wife? this distressing condition. firet : bottle gave me great relief and after Mies Short—Ob! Mr. Hill, is it fair taking’ afew more bottles, I was to ask me to give up a steady po-| completely cured; a0 completely that aition for such an uncertainty? it becomes & pleasure to recommend ng. Archduke Leopold Salvator has ie greet ete aad — sued for divorce because his wife has | Price 50c. joined a close-to-nature community ‘and confines her wardrobe to an old burlap sack. Ivea safe bet that last year at thie time he was kicking | , about her millinery and dresemaking | Sh, bills. Some men are never satisfied. | tome Grace—Why did she break the en gagement? Myrtle—He the only girl he had ever kissed. Grace—What of it? Myrtle—Why, she naturally rea- soned that he was either untruthful or absurdly foolish, and he W8| petween hardly worth having in either case. | 200" the Fitteen men are known to be atill intéeay of of cases of the disease have been re- ported are: Chicago, Galesburg, De catur, North Chiliicothe, Hoopeston, St. Charles, Stronghuret, Wyoming, Castleton, Toulon, East Peoria, Burrowsville and Jacksonville. Trustee’s Sale. his wife, by their deed of trnst 31, 14, and recorded in the within and for Bates county, No. 179, page 134 conveys Missouri, lying and being situ and state of Missouri, to-wit: ‘Lot number fourteen (14) twenty-two (22) in the city which conveyance was the payment of one seri! in said deed of trust; default has been made in the paym Wise Counsel From the Sotuh. “J want to give some valuable ad- Now, , at th nest holder of note aad pores descri| igen Bt hest bidder for cash, ‘a door ot the hi in the county of Bates ahd gtate of ‘Thursday, Febraary 7, 1007, between the aie ate tes Sa Interest wad coat. J.8 Ni 4 Order of Publication. STATE OF MISSOURI, told her that she was “Fe eam hat of te aaceeselt ‘ison of section twen! Jot one of e ROFIbwest Garter ee the Ball of lot swo of (0 west quarter of an J tulantinstbiiaeeomciets a sell oo. alive who served ae confederate con meals Whereas, G. C. Turner and Sarab F. Turner, ed December recorder’s office in book ed to the unde: trustee the following described ae ate In the county 0! in block number of Rockville, Mo., made in trust to secure certain note fully de and whereas, ent of both incl} d interest now past due and id. mien tees ah ie Fegan fn gn holder‘of sud note and PoP mat proceed to gel premi blic vendue, the east front ee enemies hours of nine o’clock in the fore- gon of that 1d debt, PAINTER, ‘Trus' note of these gatherings. and sometimes little girls. There i death, even of grim satisfaction ove! the true feelings of ‘the a country fair. Leave it in, says but*the ving that terrifies. — of about 50 y: Dutéh goverfimient: A ‘a short distance above timber is exported to Tope. - one for every 4,500, and Bulgaria one ? is prohibited, and measures are to be taken to end the opium trade within These governmental regu- lations, remarks Youth's Companion, a growing public sentiment against the use of ex- No one can look at one of the pho- without a It is not the horror alone or chiefly of the thing jiself, the ugly, inanimate center of It is the faces of the spectators that shock our very souls. They are always laughing faces. Good nature, even jollity, seems to be the Always we see the faces of little boys grinning cheerfully toward the camera. There are women sometimes in the crowd, | no sign in these pictures of horror of a difficult and obnoxious task per- formed by necessity. The man who called it a “lynching bee” appreciated lynchers. Leave out the grim wreck in the cen- ter, and the picture might be taken for an ordinary cheerful gathering at writer in American Magazine, and, oh, my brothers! it is not the dead, . —_—_—_-__F The chief wealth of: the..forests of Java) at the present time, consists in the wood of the teak tree, which is extensively employed for. naval con- struction. ‘The trees, are ordinarily cut when they have “attalded an age ‘and,& height of be- tween 60 and 70 fest. The species most esteemed ‘has woodof a brown color possessing ® greasy feeling to the touch. Since 1880 the teak has been ‘ciltivated, and the cutting of fury af the cutting, designed to cause ‘the wood: to part) slowly -with its sap,| . ‘consists in the girdling Of the trunks |: ‘the;ground two before the trees ure felled. The Lieut. Peary says seeking the orth pole’compels hunger» and / DA hy. those Who keep on tfyiag'to find SQM OH} WONG The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has beam: in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of CL AIEEE a “sessnnrien ie ia beg sonal supervision singe its infancy. 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 Filatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. cenune CASTORIA Atwayrs Bears the Signature of eZ i B In Use For Over 3Q Years. {THE CENTAUR COMPANY, TT MURRAY STREET, NEW YORK CITY. The Kind You Have Always Bog Has Stood The Test 25 Year: Grove’s Tasteless Chill Tonic No-Crrre-No-Pay. 50 cents. ee A Brana The Missouri Pacific Time Tabi Butler Station." CORRECTED TIME TABLE, SOUTH BOUND. 0, 20) qoptp & Southwest mall & Ex No 207K.C & Joplin mail & Express } No, 205 K.C & Joplin mall & Express No, 291 Loval freight WORTH BOUND, | | Wo, 208 Kansas City and 8t. Louts Ex, 5:(f No, 204 Kangaa City mail and Express 1:44 No, 210 Kansas City limited maj, "LOCAL FREIGHT: No. 202 Local Freight %o. 252 Kansas City stock INTERSTATE DIVISION, WEST BOUND. qo. 241 Local freight and Pas mixed EAST ROUND. No. 242 Local freight and Pas mixe\ E, 0, VaNDERVOR’ Two Years for $1.25 A complete history of two history-making years— 1907 and 1908. 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