The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, March 28, 1907, Page 1

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Che VOL. XXIX. HOT WEATHER CATARRH. Affects the Stomach, Kidneys, Bowels, Pelvic Organs. Catarrh, the Bane of the World Pe-ru-na, the Standard Remedy. | vein sus con ntler Weekly BUTLER, MISSUURI, THURSDAY, MARCH 28, 1907. | COLD WEATHER CATARRH. Affects the Head, Throat, Lungs, Bronchial Tubes. at Catarrh is recognized all over the civilized world as a formidable disease. In the United States alone, two hundred thousand people have catarrh annually. In other countries the ratio of victims is as great. For many years Pe-ru-na has held the foremost place as a standard remedy for catarrh. Pe-ru-na is well-known in. both the western and DR. J. M. NORRIS SPECIALIST, ‘ON THE EYE, EAR, NOSE ‘AND THROAT. Gives special attention to the treat- ment of Catarrh and {ts efiecé upon the Ears, Throat and Lungs. Those in need of Glasses can have the eyes tested free, and properly fit- ted. Office on the South side, over El- mer Dixon’s store. Office Lours from 9 a. m. to 4 p.m. ‘The Clansman’ Is Prohibited. Detroit, Mich., March 25.—Mayor William B. Thompson prohibited the production of “The Clansman,” the play adapted from Thomas Dix- on’s book of the same title, and which was booked for the Detroit opera house for the last week in April. Judge Alfred Murphy, ofthe Wayne county circuit court, anda number of white citizens, joined witha dele- gation of colored residents in pro- testing that the presentation of the play here would engender bad feeling and possibly lead toa disturbance by the colored peuple of the city. How to Remain Young. continue young in health and bes , do p. Mrs N. phy McDonough, Ga. . says: “Three bottles of Electrle Bitters, cured me of chronic liver and stom- ache trouble, complicated with such healthy ston of the blood that my ekin turned red as flannel. Iam now practically 20 years young- er than before I took -tric Bit- : Tcan do all my work eastern hemispheres. Bridge Went Down. Henry County Democrat. On Tuesday, the bridge over Tebo Creek at Beaty ford, collapsed plung- ing @ young man named Combs, and another man with team and wagon into the water. Young Combs, who {s a son of Bud Combs, witha hired man were re- turning home from Calhoun with a load of cotton seed meal, the wagon being drawn by four horses. At the Beaty ford, three miles southwest of Calhoun, justas they were on the bridge, it gave away plunging men, wagon and horses down. Both men were bruised and scratched, and the wagon was much damaged. Neigh- bors came to thelr help and after some delay and by hard work the horses were gotten out of the water and put in a neighboring barn. Next day they were so stiff they could not get out of the barn. “I bought a -fifty cent bottle of Kodol and the benefit I received all the gold in Georgia could not buy. In three months I was well and hearty. May you live long and pros- per.”—C. N. Cornell, Roding, Ga., 1906. Kodol tor dyspepsia is sold by Clay’s drug store. She Totes a Gun. Wallace Crossley’s bill to make gun toslug a felony was beaten by a woman; for the most effective speech made against !¢ just before it was voted down was by Representative Biggs, of Schuyler county, who sald: “My wife totes agua while I am down here trying to make laws, and les me tell you, she knows how to uee it. Shecan knock a crab-apple off atree ata hundred yards. I don’t want her to go to the peniten- tiary for carryinga revolver for pro- tection.” , Salaries on Rural Routes. Washington, March —Under the recent Act of congress making ap- propriations for the postal service for the ensuing fiscial year, the post- master general may fix the salartes of carrters in the rural delivery ser- vice atarate not exceeding $900 per annum after July 1, 1907. The; highest rate now paid {s $/20 per, annum. The readjustment of sala- ries under the new law has been fully determined, but it 1s proposed to al low the maximum rate, $900, to all carriers on 1outes twenty four or more miles in length as shown by the records of the depart nent. This will give approximately 22,000 or about 60 per cent of the carriers, an advance in salary of $180 per an num. A Guaranteed Cure For Piles Itching, blind, bleeding, protruding piles. Druggists are authorized to refunding money if PAZOOINTMENT fails to cure in 6 to 14 days. 50e Deadly Warning to Wives. Joplin, Mo., March 24.—When Joe Trim’s wife asked him for money. he dropped dead. Trim ts a machinist His wife wanted the money to do some shopping. After he gave her a small sum and she started to leave the house, he collapsed. DeWitt’s Carbolized Witch Hazel Salve undoubtedly the best relief for piles. Sold by Clay’s drug store. CASTORIA The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Gignature of HOW WINT RODE THROUGH ’EM. Charge Led by Him. Brigadier General Theodore J. Wint, who died in Philadelphia, led perhaps the last old-fashioned cav- alry charge that will ever be made. At the same time he commanded the only Taited States cavalry ever {n action on forelgn territory except in the Mexican war, and {np addition did what no other American officer has ever done—commanded English troops in action. Captain J. D. 8. Cook, a Civil war veteran and 4 lifelong friend of Gen- eral, Wint told of this historic cav- alry charge. “I¢ occurred during the Boxer dis- turbances In China,” sald he, “tien- eral Wint, then Heutenant colonel of the Sixvh cavalry, had been ordered with two equadrons of his command to ase!st in the operating {n China. After «he taking of Pekin by the al- lied f{ *2e8 Wint with bis cavalry was 0 atled to keep open the line of communication between Tien Tsin and Pokin, One morning 4 detach- ment of 2,000 regular Chinese troo ps threatened the Hne, General Wint with his own troops and about 200 Euglish lancers which had been place ed under his command went out to meet the Chinese troops. iiis entire command was less than half the enemy. When he was in striking distance he ordered a charge along his whole line, It was «a regular old the charge—no carbines, only the pistols and sabers with,ofcourse, the long lances of the English eav- alrynien. In close formation they rode down upon the Chinese, the American Yankee’s yells mingled with the whoops of thelr cockney cousina, “Wat happenet? Only onething ever happened when Wint led troops They went through those Chinese like—-well as the General expressed it to me afterwards, ‘We drove ’em all over the lot.’ The Americans with thelr pistols and sabersand the English with sholr long lances com - pletely demorallzed the yellow troops never forgot as long as Wint and his cavalry remained tu Cina. General Wint was unstinting fn his praise of the English cavalrymen. “They kuow how to fight all night,’’ he said, ‘and they showed it. They exhibited no trace of tll feeling | or euvy because they werecommand- | ed by an American, “Tt {a highly improbable that such 8 cuvalry charge will ever be made again for the modern rapid fire rifles used by {nfantry would almost de- The Badge of Honesty Is on every wrapper of Doctor Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery because a full list of the ingredients composing it Is printed there in plain English. Forty years of experience has proven its superior worth as a blood puritier and invigorate ing tonic for the cure of stomach disorders and all liver ills. It builds up the run- down system as no other tonic can in which alcohol is used. The active medic inal principles of native roots such as Golden Seal and Queen’s root, Stone and Mandrake root, Bloodroot and Black Cherrybark aro extracted and preserved by the use of chemically pure, triple refined glycerine, Send to Dr. R. V. Pierce at Buffalo, N. Y., for free. booklet which fuptes extracts from well-recognized med- {ca! authoritigs such as Drs. Bartholow, Klug, Scuddey, Coe, Ellingwood and a host of othezs, showing that these roots nded upon for their curative action iQ all weak states of the stomach, radual running down system, n ery lood and so invigorates ‘hus all skin affections, blotches, pimples and eruptions as well as scrofulous swel- lings and old open running sores or ulcers are cured and healed. In treating old; running sores, or ulcers, it is well to in- sure their healing to apply to them Dr. Pierce’s All-Healing Salve, If your drug- stroy a body of cavalry armed only |§ with pistols and sabers.”” Folk’s Extra Session Call. Jefferson City, March —Governor Folk tesued his official proclamation convening the legislature in extra session on April 9, 1907, at 12 o'clock, noon. The date was post- poned one week later than ¢.. gov- ernor had intended be sause of the elty and school elections which will be April 2. There are efx specific subjects named in the call besides other mat- tors which may be suggested in spec- {al message during the session, and also the appropriation of money to pay the expense of the session, Fol- lowlng {s the otficlal document: By virtue of authority in me vest- ed by the constitutton of the state of Missouri, I, Joseph W. Folk, gov-! ernor of the state of Missourl, do hereby convene the Forty-fourth general assembly of the state of Mis- sour! {n extra session, at the capitol in Jefferson City, on Tuesday, April 9, 1907, at 12 o'clock, noon for the following purposes: First—To enact such legislation as may be necessary to provide for the regulation of the rates of public utility corporations Second—To enact logtslation regu lating and controlling dramshops. Third—To provide legtslative en- actments for the enforcements of the dramshop laws throughout the state. Fourth—To provide for the remov- al or reeall of derelict oftictals, Fitth—To enact laws relating to the} police system of clties of this state of 100,000 inhabitants or over. Sixth—To provide an enactment with emergency clause for the sup- presston of race track gambling, Seventh—To consider any other subjects that may be submitted by special message during such sesstor, Kighth—To make an appropria- tlon for the expenses of thie extra session of the general assembly. Josevu W. Fou, Governor. CAB ORIA. Boara the Tha Kind You Have Always Bough Bignatrre 7s i bua r MU EH ‘Negro Women Shot and taught them a lesson that they | i By Arkansas Mob. Stamps, Ark., March 25 —Charged with having used @ razor with prob- able fatal effects on Mrs, Ella Rhe- | ton, a white woman and her daugh- ter, and kicking her son, a small eild, about the road, two negro women were shot to death at Me- Kamile near here, last night by o mob. According tothe statement of Mrs. Rheton, she and her two children were attacked by the negro women while walking slong the public road, she and her daughter received knife wounds which may prove fatal, The women were arrested and plac- ‘ed under guard at the schoolhouse from which place they were removed by the mob late at night and shot to death. Be very careful of your bowels when you have acold. Nearly all other cough syrups areconstipating, especially those containing oplates. Kennedy’s Laxative Cough Syrup moves the bowels—contains no opiates. Sold by Clay’s drug store. Bankers Want Lower Taxes. Jefferson City, March 25.—A com- mittee of the State Bankers’ Xesoet- tion went before the state board of equalization asking that board to establish a rule for the minimum as- sessment of bank stock at 40 per cent of the valuation. The present rule 1s 55 percent. The committee was composed of A. O. Wilson of St. Louts, J. P. Hinton of Hannibal, Thornton Cook and J. R. Dominick of Kansas City, W. C. Harris of Ful- ton and W. F. Keyser of Sedalia. The board submitted figures show- gist don’t happen to have this Salve in| Ing that other classes of property stock, send fifty-four cents in postage stamps to Dr. R. V. Pierce, Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y., and 8 large box of the «All-Healing Salve® will reach you by return post ‘You can’t afford to accept a secret nos- trum as a substitute for this non-alcoholic, medicine OF KNOWN COMPOSITION, not even though the urgent dealer may make 8 little Dlager profit SO Bierce’ ‘Pleasant ets regulate Sogarosted, uny granules, easy to takes ascandy. i was not assessed as high as bank stock. The figures showed live stock at 36, merchandise at 40 and real estate at 29 per cent of their valua- tion. The state board will consider the matter and make the minimum when they report on other classes of prop- erty in April ts a cc Cold Habit The old cold goes; a new one quickly comes. It’s the story of a weak throat, weak lungs, a tendency to consumption. Ayer'’s Cherry Pectoral breaks up the taking-cold habit. It strengthens, soothes, heals. Ask your doctor about it. The best kind of a testimonia! — “Sold for over sixty years.” Mode by J.C. Ayer Co., Lowell, Mass. Also manufacturore of 9 SARSAPARILLA, Yersissn We have no secrets the formulas of all « r eh medicines, Keep the bowels regular with A ers Pills, just one pill each night. DR. COX. One of the Best, Most Fashion- ably Bred Grandsons cf the Great George Wilkes. Mita colte are large ‘es enough farm, carriage or coach horses, Have actlon, style and epeedonoucl i! w fancy drivers, roadsters or race horses, All good colors—black brown or bay. Thetr intelligence size, eterna, watts and osher qual tips of genera! utility make them the best and most useful general pur- pose horse the farmer can ratse and these qualities make them always ft demand at the top of the market when the owner wants to sell, Fee reduced to $15 during 1907, As Luke Park stable, Butler, Mo E, S$, CRABTREE, Proprietor Worked Like a Charan. Mr. DN. Waiker, editor of that spicy journal, the Enterprise, Loulsa Va.,snya: “fran anail inmy foot Inss week and at once applted Buek- jlens Armia salve. No inflamma. tion followed: the salve slmply hoal- ed the wound. Heals every sore burn and ekin disease. Guaranteed at Clay's drug store, 25 Queer Beit is Made On Thaw Case Outcome. Kalamazoo, Mich, March 2" - More thana score of Kalamazoo men will resemble travel-stained trampe ff the conditions of 9 wager are carried out. Harold Gthson and Davis Lewis, manager of the Mag- ara Hotel, became involved tn an argument regarding the Tbaw trial. A number of bystanders became {n- terested. There were six for Thaw and six against him. Gibson, in a jesting tone, suggest- ed that the party, the twelve persons present, should discontinue shaving until the verdict was given, and that then the’ members whose views agreed with the findings of the jury should be the guests of honor at a banquet to be paid for by the men who lost the wager. In the mean- time all are to go unshaven. hanna To removes cough. Cet at the cold which causes the cough. There fs nothing so good as Kennedy’s Laxative Cough Syrup. Sold ‘by Clay’s drug store. Frank Marshall, aged 26 years, died at his home near the Mt. Ver- non church March 13th, 1907, after 4n fllnees of fourteen days of typhoid fever. Mr. Marshall and Miss Maud Rinehart were united in marriage Dee. 31st, 1905, to this unton one child was born, which with the moth- er, three sisters and his father and mother survive him.—Adrian Jour- nal. CasTORIA. Bears the The Kind You Have Always Bout Bignatere @¢

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