The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, March 14, 1907, Page 8

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Sloars } Liniment For Cough, Cold, Croup. A Sore Throat, Stiff Neck.” | Rheumatism and. Neuralgia At all Dealers Price 25¢ 50c & #100 Sent Free “Sloan's Book on Horses Cattle, Hogs & Poultry a | Good Roads Legislation, City, March —After a hard fight onthe floor of the house tes cfthe measure crea: ice ofsteve highway en gineer Won a vietory. The measure csed by a vote of TS to 44, after several Democrats, who had voted jagaiust the bill had changed their votes, ‘The changlog was started by Whleon of Si, Lovis, a Republi- can, who first changed from ‘No” to “Aye” and then back again, This angered several democrats, who then changed thelr votes to “Aye.” The fight onthe measure was led by [Tubbs of Gasconade, who matntain- Jofferson Washineton the methodol ha mall motter ine wo ury by Assistant Pootrnaster Goner d De Graw, the diviaion of dead letters fe | now returntog all lettera to senders when t! be fon tttind, Heretot ite a considerably portion of the returnable tr could not be returne} owing to lnek of facilittes but the report of the dead letver df vision for Fobrenary shows the re. turn of a fn!) 100 per cent of matl of this characwer all, 1,050,303 pieces of undelivered mall were re- evn hy ve he divesion in February, | r ! = _ voalopdety 4 si ae G4 16 jed that there is no necessity for the J 1007, As pelea ‘ | state highway engineer at this time. 7 Plecea tn February te last year, Tn iy ? GPi2 vultha lavcera psned, monks Conner of Buchanan, a good roads sd ney \ akhdin f “advocate, led the fight for the meas- 4 to the amount of S594658) was | ’ ; lanad jure. The emergency clause of the 1d. | pers eat 4 : bill failed to carry. i NR i The house hy # vote of 111 to 9 q i} , Cure a Cold in Gre Day, | passed the measure creating the of- " Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUI) ties of county bighway engi ; NINE Tab! 41) drovyintes al | This officer may be the county sur. > bath , Ai hi Heal _ os | Yeyor, if the dnties of the latter are inot too heavy for him to assume the duties of the newly © ed office. Letter to Mr. F.f. Christopher. | Has Stood The Test 25 Years. The old, original GROVE’S Taste: Butler, Mo, A dane Stes } ke oun | less chill tonic. You know what you Dane Si i eh ONT ore taking lis irovand quinine tp Pav vutes tow as oth ly gastaless form. Nocure,nopay. 50¢ ers sell antyorate ? paint? | paltcnmenlie Peron sider forse differen’) Burton’s Term Shortened, maker iat.thatrank, in away, | * as “fret clase: thoy haya their ree | Abilene, Kan., March 11 —Former gions:one's revlon falarge, nnother’s | Senator Joseph R. Burton, now serv- fasmal':evervo “first class”? in jing asix-monshe’ term in the pent- {te region | sentlary at Ironton, Mo., for prac- Of theac 4) or {Jor 50, oneis best, | Heing before the Postottice Depart- another next, and xo on down; but | ment as attorney for an alleged get- the prices are all the sane or about | tieh quick eompany of St. Louis, will the same—youean bay one for lesa} be released on March 22, according than another though; a personal | to a letter received from him. matter sometimes. The letter states that his term has tut how, do you think, can Davoe | been shortened thirty days for good est foruo mora than the | behavior. Burton says he and his answer fe: 18 costs less to | wife, who has been Ilving at Ironton since his confinement s0 as toas to be nexr him, will return here imme- eell it; more to make, Iss to. sell, Reputation helps sell 16. Its 150 years help sell it. diately upon his release, Go by the name, Yours truly CABTORIA. F.W. Devoe & Co. | pessing vba Kind You Have Always Bought New York, Chicawo and Kansas City. | Signature C. W. Hess sells our paint. of Moneyed Americans Abroad | Are Spenders. Wherever they may be on the Continent they are sure to get the | European Edition of the New York Herald. a It is usually the only newspaper printed in English thet they can get, ‘ An advertisement in its columns reaches , them when they welcome a buying hint. Mexico's President. is now years ol ge € » the stra-| ge, b | nh | I a co, and of t 30 years as an inte ry has known absolute active solc he came power the c peace, where before it was in consiant Railroads in every direction, developing great in- dustries and opening up the wonder ful mining districts of Mexico. Miles upon miles of telegraph lines are given in figures that astonish foreign. ers. To President Diaz was given the honor of completing the great work of the drainage of the valley of Mexico, which has made the capital so notably healthy in comparison to former years. This important engineering problem was commenced 300 years ago, but owing to insurmountable difficulties the project never materialized until the preesnt era of peace and enlight- enment. To President Diaz is also due the inauguration of numerous great port works, besides many other enterprises during recent years, ace revolution now run What It Has Cost. Gen. Leonard Wood, United commanding the Phil {ppine division, includes in his an nual some statistics to show what the American occupation of the islands has cost in human life. From the records it appears that from the occupation of the islands to July 17, 3,884 soldi and officers, regu: lars, have died in the islanc navy and marin 207; scouts, ; state volunteer United States volun ; total, 6,342. Civilian em: members of officers’ families, ex-soldiers, ex-employes, convicts un: der military control, and miscella- neous cases, since the occupation of the islands to July 17, 1906, civilian employes, 179; civilians not em- ployes, 460; total, 989. Of the vie. tims, S76 re killed by the enemy, 696 diced of wounds, 406 were drowned, 622 died of cholera, 315 of smallpox and 136 were suicide: Maj. Btates a report Protection to Workmen, By recent 1 ition France takes the lead of all cov ies in the pro tection which it affords to working: men, A workman in the discharge of his duty docs not have to prove neg: tt ligence on the part of his employer in orcer to recover damages. The government guarantees the laborer against loss through his employer be: coming | Krupt, and in some cases an annuity of a value as high as 60 per cent. of the workman's wages goes to his family in case he is killed. empl in order to protect Ives st all kinds of | es, and the companies which do this insurance, are, in turn inves} tigated by the government. “The recent Grang Prix automobile race in France introduced to the world a new invention—the detach. able rim,” s Magazi (Chic this novelty is the Technical World »). merit of said to lie more in its labor-saving than in its time-saving qualities. This fact is of consider- able moment to the autoist, however, “The when one considers the hard work ex- perienced by him in replacing his tire by the old method. The detachable rim is flanged in the ordinary way. Near the outer edge of the rim six pro- jecting ears are riveted. On the wheel itself six bolts project. Bolts and ears interlock. In order to inflate the tire it must first be dismounted.” Robert Gailey, Princeton's old-time center rush, has sailed for China again, sent out by Princeton’s under- graduates and alumni to develop a Young Men's Christian association in the city of Peking, with special refer- ence to the educated and official classes. Gailey has been spending a@ year in the United States after seven years at Tientsin, where he stayed at his association post during the boxer war. When Arthur J. Balfour was secre- tary for Ireland he once asked the celebrated Father Healy: “Do the Irish really hate me as much as the newspapers say?” The grim old wit replied: “My dear sir, if they only hated the devil as much as they hate you my occupation would be gone.” _——EeEE Matrimonial tickets are supplied by the Canadian Pacific railway to set- tlers in the northwest territory who wish to make a journey in order to secure a wife. On presenting the re- turn coupon and the marriage certifi- cate the settler is entitled to free transportation for his bride. _——_—_—_____- —______} Victor Hugo had a very exalted opinion of tis own importance. Walk- ing with @ friend one day, he ab- ruptly asked: “Can you imagine what I would say to Caesar, should I meet him?” “Yes,” replied his friend. “You would say ‘My dear Confrere!’” Japan has discarded the “goose step” in its army for an easier one. After its late experience with Russia if does not have to’ prove its war- ebset The Teaching Profession. was a time when tl hool- S } Wa by gradua r work. The qualities and the special training now ed of a teacher have given him a much more indepen- dent and even more honorable posi- tion than he formerly held. Conse quently, there have been an increased esprit de corps, and a greater zeal in the profession; In his address before the Middlesex Teachers’ association, President Eliot spoke of the enthusi- astic devotion for their calling and preference for it above all others, which are often demanded and which, he might have added, are often found among those who are engaged in the work of education. For efficiency can- not be secured by high salaries and pensions. Like the profession of arms, that of teaching is one that is chosen more often for glory than for gain, but it is important that glory should not have to be sought at the expense of ordinary comfort, says the New York Post. “In Harvard college,” said Dr, Eliot, “the salaries are high- er than in the teaching profession generally, yet they are lower than can be had by men of the right quality in other professions.” a In the Show Business. It seems strange and not altogeth- er pleasing, that the United States sovernment, as represented in the navy department, should be obliged to go into the show business to encour age enlistments, comments , the Youth's Companion. The latest and most successful scheme is the moving: picture machine which shows the life of the bluejacket on shipboard, and some of it on land. The advertising value of the plan lies in the readiness and completeness by which it enables the recruiting officers to give appli- cants an accurate idea of their duties and pleasures, It is especially effi- cacious in the west, where less is known about life at sea, A recruit. ing party in Nebraska lately displayed the moving pictures to a crowd of 15,000 people, eee Copper as Barometer of Trade. This is an electrical age. Therefore copper is one of the most acc urate barometers of trade. In some re Spects it is a better gauge of develc p ments in the | industrial world thaa are | iron and steel. Between 18; and 195 the production of it inereased 150 per cent, in the same ten year pe riod the output of iron and steel rose | 145 per cent. Copper as a me dium | is doing in many ways what iron and! steel used to do, Its position is some what analogous to that of concrete as! related to brick. The new form pro: | duces the same results as the old, and at a lower rate of cost. | disporting itself in} y houses this season, is mixing , bridge with childish games, such as hunt the slipper, leap frog, puss in the corner and blind man’s buff, and, getting a lot of fun out of the pas- | time. Gambling is all very well for | dowagers, but the younger set would , fain vary the excitement of cards with a little “rough house,” even to tear- | ing up and down stairs, secreting | slippers or rushing madly from cor-| ner to corner pursued by some “cat.” | It is an artless craze, and if no bones | nor bric-a-brac are shattered, one tole be approved. A man with artistic tastes and no! little originality in expressing them recently designed a very beautiful rosewood brass-bound receptacle for cards as a wedding gift. It pleased even his fastidious ideas, for the de sign was perfectly carried out, mak- ing the stand not only antique, but a most useful ornament for the hall table. Imagine his amusement when in acknowledgment of the present the recipient alluded to it as an ash tray! At the Marine hotel in Ventnor, Isle of Wight, there is a porter of lofty mien who walks about showing to whoever cares to see it a three penny piece attached to his watch chain. It is the “tip” given him by John D. Rockefeller, Jr., when he was leaving, the hotel after a three weeks’ stay. The porter says he wouldn't part with it for “a ten-pound note.” It's a curiosity. The young woman in New York who threatened to put a “led pill” through another young woman was held for the grand jury, perhaps be- cause she couldn’t spell any better than the public printer. She should have waited until more besides her- self and Brander Matthews had be come familiar with the new cult. It pays preciated, amm neers ANegetable Preparation similating the Food andRegula- She Stands ani Bows of motes Digestion Cheerful- |p piper So me neither |} ium, Morphine nor Mineral. T NARCOTIC. Aperfect Remedy for Constipa- —— Stomach, Diarrhoea Worms Convulsions Feverish- | ness and LOSS OF SLEEP. Fac Simile Signature of NEW YORK. EXAST COPY OF WRAPPER. Has Stood The Ta Grove’s stelass The Kind You Have. CASTORIA, —— For Infants and Children, Always Bought Use For Over | Thirty Years. ‘THE CEWTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORE CITY. Test 25 Years hill Tonic Rai tee? Mea a Nv . Tae™ar AO conte Order of Publication. The Missouri Pacific Time Table { STATE OF MISSOURI, ig Butler Station, é County of Rates, 4 In the « treuit Court. February term, 1907, February 1th, 1007 Mary A. Clymer, Plaintift James 8, Lickliler, Fannie Licktider, Defend- ants. Now at this dey comes the plaintif herein, by her attorney, Harry Clymer, and tiles her pes | tition and affidavit, alleging, among other things that defendants vs S. Lieklider and Fannie Lickliler are not residents of the State of Missouri: Whereupon, itis ordered by the Court that raid defendants ed by publication that plaintiff has con need a suit agsiast them in this court, the object andgeneral nature of which is to obt a leer partition of the following described real estate lying and being situate in the county of Bates and State of Mis- souri to wit: The northwest quarter of the northeast quar- ter of eection twenty-four (21) In township forty-one (41) of range thirty-two (2) and all of | lots numbered-fonr (4) and five (5) and thirty- | one (3!) feet off of the west side ofl t number three(3) in block numer three (3) of Page’s ad- | dition to the town (now city) of Adrian in said Bates county, Mo., and to have decreed the re- | spective interests of each of the plaintiff? and | defendants hi n, and have the above de- | seribed premi 1d and the proceeds divided | among the © parties secording to their | respective int ts, and that unless the said | ‘dames 8. Licklider and Fannie Licklider be | ingang being s'tnate in the county of Bates and sppear at this court. at the next term thereof, to be begun and holden at the court house in the city of Rutler, in eald county, on the first Monday in May, 1907, and on or be- fore the first day of said term, answer or plead tothe petition in eaid cause, the same will be jaken as confessed, and judgment will be rend- ered accordingly, And itis f:rther ordered. that a copy hereof be published, according tc law, in Tuk BUTLER WEEKLY Tiwks, 8 newspaper published In said county of Bates for four weeks successively, published at least once a week, the laet inaer- jion to be at least thirty days be/ore the frst day of said next May term of this court. T. D. EMBRER, Circuit Clerk, from the record. Witness my and seal of the circuit court of {exat.] Bates county, this 14th cay. of Feb- ruary, 1907. T. D, EMBREE, it Circuit Clerk. A true sory Order of Publication. STATE OF MISSOURI, County of Bates. In the Probate Court for the County of Bates | 5 Fel 1907, ve ee bruary term, Charl>s M. Frey Deceased. F. Frey, Administrator. Order of Publication. li & i if fi fig! Ee CORRECTED TIME TABLE, SOUTH BOUND, Wo. 209 Joplin & Southwest mail & Ex 5 am No % & Joplin mail & Express 12-85 p m | Fo, 205 K & Joplin mail & Express 10:25 pm “0. 291 Local freight I:bam | woRTT PADD, No, 208 Kansas City and St. TLonte Ex, 5:42am No, 204 Kansar Cite mailand Exprese 140 pm. No, 210 Kansas (ity limited mail 10:25 pm LOCAL FREIGHT: No. 292 Local Freient 10:55 8 mo ‘To 252 Kansas City stock 8:35 pm INTERSTATE DIVISION, WRST'ROUND, So, 241 Local freight and Pas mixed RAT ROUND, Yo 242 Local freicht and Pas mixed ar5:00 dm E. C, Vaypervort. Agant 8:00am 1 Truates’s Sale . Muti and Tons'ta Mallia, feed cf trnst dated Febroirg Jed in the Recorder's offen Wh his wife 2nd, 1897, and re witht) and for MT No. 147 page 252, trnstee the following erihed real estate lye state of Misconr!. to-wit: Thirty (99) ners off the west sideof the sonth- east quarter of the ronthweat quarter of sec’ thirty-five (35). tawnshin forty (49), range thir tv-two (92); which eonvevance was mada ° trnstto seenre the payment of three ceri notes fully described in said deed of trnat ¢ whereas, defanit has heen made In the pay ofthe princinal end interest of the nor $475.00 and the same is now past due anc, naid. Now ther fore, at the reanest of the I holder of said note and pnrsnant to the tions of eaid deed of trnat Twill progeed to: the above deserihe? premises at onhtic vendn to the bighes’ bidder for cash, at ‘he weet front door of the court honee in the city of Butler, county of Rates and state of Missour! on Monday, March lth 1907, hetween the honré of 90’clock in the forenoon and 5 o’clock In the afternoon of that di: the purposes of sat and cost. . Trustee’a Sale Notice. Whereas, T A. trode and Nora E. Strode his wife, bv their certain deed of trnet November 19th, 1993, and recorded In corder’s office of Bates Co, ined thelr right, title and Ii lowing described real situa being inthe county of vi, to-wit:

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