The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, August 22, 1907, Page 1

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The Butler Weekly Times. VOL. XXIX. BUTLER, MISSOURI, THURSDAY, AUGUST 22, 1907. NO, 43 A Hair NEW STATE LAWS, [Petitions and remonetrances tneo-/ RAILROAD ENJOINS The Dog Was “t.” C; Bide Dudley in the Denver Post. 4 = Mae meccee one by i It Fa ALABAMA OFFICIALS. They’re telling a story on a Capl- Acts of the Special Session Are hibits any mn from treating tol hill woman who has a boy baby ‘ sentient Byres at tetraisiate cn be Goomaid just old enough to craw! on the floor. Dressin Now in Effect—What puntagescdber reed day|Federal Court Order P: nts The woman, also, has a pug dog. A y ge = 5 pauery Oy Mi er Freve friend of the family—an old bachelor They Are. between the hours of 5 a.m. and 7 called one evening recently and sand the woman watching the baby and dog playing on the parlor floor He thought he ought to express his admiration. “Ien’t he cute?” said the old bach- elor. “He’s the cutest thing in the world,” replied the woman, beaming pleasantly on the caller. “He’s mighty sweet, too, I ven- ture to say,” came from the old bachelor. “The sweetest thing alive,” replied the woman. “How much do you love him?” asked the man next. p.m. Physiclans and draggiste are Prosecution of All Rate allowed to write and fill preecriptions for medical purposes. The hospital- Violators. {ty of the home is not to be inter- ferred witb. The Tariff and Its “Friends” K, ©. Star, In recognition of the overwhelm- ing sentiment in favor of tariff revi- sion, even some of the most stead- fast “stand patters” admit that the tariff should be revised after the presidential election to meet changed conditions, but that {¢ must be re- vised by its “Iriends.” One of the changed conditions is that the cost of living in thiscountry has increased more than 50 per cent since the Dingley bill went into effect. But an unchanged condition {s that many of the Dingley duties, admitted by the author of the bill and other protectionists to be excessive, were imposed with assurances to Presl- dent McKinley, who opposed many of these rates, that they were made high for the purpose of “trading” in the making of reciprocity treaties. Twenty such treaties were negotiat- ed under McKinley’s direction, but all of them were smothered in the senate, The “too high” duties have been énjoyed by the trusts andim-| nis federal {ojunction move is posed on the people for ten years, | sain asa gauntlet for the state to and under the present plans of the] 4, its work. ‘friends’’ of the tariff, 1 will be near- ly three years more before revision GOVERNOR PLANS FIGHT, could be accomplished. What en-| Gov. Comer has not said anything couragement for general revision|{n regard to the movement. Butit does the tariff party give when {t/{s well known that he will make ev- fails even to correct the grave admit-|ery effort to force the Louisville and ed defects in its system. Nashville to accept the rates on the some basie that he settled with the Mc sengecbas — pel ‘ahaee Southern allway, after which the Frisco, Mobile and Ohio and the man of his age about all depart- J ments of newepaper work, elther in Alabama dnd Great Southern will be forced to agree to the same terms. the city or country, up stairs and The pedis a pe og peg dows, editors! cays: “To boom that {f necessary he would convene their home town fs the slogan of all the Leglelature to repeal any laws in good county editors, of whom Mis- the way of the enforcement of the souri has a host. Week in and week railroad rate statutes. out, year upon year, unless disaster follow faster and faster, the country 7 ; editor 1s the unselfish booster, and Mexicans Kill Japanese. promoter of the community fn which Mazallan, Mexico, Aug. 12.—A tele- he lives. He constancy to his cause| pram recelyed here announces that 1s equaled only by hie self-sacrifice. | ag m1 Fuerte, a construction campon His ambition is impersonal; ever he| the Kansas City, Mexican & Ortent strives to uplift his town, seldom to] Ratiway, a pitched battle took place induce his town to exalt himself. He} pegwoen gangs of Japanese and Mex- stands for order, good citizenship, | ican workmen. public morality. He fights monopo-| ‘Three Japanese were killed and lyand ts the boldest opponent of}three seriously injured, and three opposition and misrule. And, ge0-| Mexicans were mortally wounded und erally, this devoted servant of the! ono wag killed. public is underpald in goods and 1] rewarded by opinion. Yet the race “ dies not out. Nor can {t, while men A Lazy Liver pursue f{deals, despite environ-| May be only a tired liver, or a starved ments.” liver. It would be @ stupid as well as Nearly every one likes a fine hair dressing. Something to make the hair more manage- able; to keep it from being too rough, or from splitting at the ends. Something, too, that will feed the hair at the same time, a regular hair-food. Well-fedhair will bestrong,and will remain where it belongs— on the head, not on the comb! The best kind of a testimonial — “Bold for over sixty years.” cane) manufacturers 0: 9 SARSAPARILLA, PILLS. é r. S CHERRY PECTORAL. “Tlove him with all my heart and || . soul,” “Can he talk?” asked the caller. | TQ COLLECT “Ofcourse not. Who ever heard of such a thing?’ the woman sald, MISSOURI CLAIMS. with a smile. scsdlisinivon “Well, I don’t know much about rere ‘ babies, you see,” sald the bachelor | A Half Million Dollars is Due the by way of excusing his apparent ig- State From the Govern- norance. “Babies?” sald the woman, show- ment, ing surprise, “I thought you were Jefferson City, Aug. 19 —C. 0, Vak talking about Fido. 1 was.” houn, anattorney of Lexington, Ky., ; was here and practically closed the Bloody Ninth to Meet, contract with Governor Folk, Attor- Columbia, Mo., Aug. 19.—A re-|ney General Hadley and the other union of the Ninth Missouri Cavalry | state offictals for the collection of the will be held in Moberly September 5! government land clatms and the bal- and 6. This regiment was called the | ance on the old Civil war debt forthe “Bloody Ninth.” It was organized | state of Missour! against the federal by Odon Guttar, who became its first | government, as authorized by anact colonel, and was later promoted to|of the last state legislature. Mr. the rank of brigadier general. Calhoun {s the attorney who was here The regiment at firet consisted of | before the legislative committee last eight troops—two from Boone Coun-| winter and presented the facts and $y, one from Callaway, one from|evidence upon which the law author- Saline, one from Montgomery, two! {zes the collection of these claims ts from Howard, one from Randolph] based. county. A troop raised in Cooper} The land claims aggregate some- county and one in Chariton county] thing more than 2 million dollara, were added later. The regiment was| and grow out of the alleged unequal mustered into service on January 2, | allotment of school lands by thegen- 1862, and did service four years./eral government. When Mlssourl When {t was full the regiment con-| was admitted into the Union asa tained 1,200 men. state it received from the government This regiment was in 15 or 20 bat-|every sixteenth section of land for tles, sald Gen. Guitar, who livesin}¢he benefit of its public schools, Columbia. ‘The fiercest was Moore’s | while some of the other states which Mills, in Callaway county. The| followed her into the Union received battles of Grand River and Yellow/every sixteenth and thirty-eecond Creek were of considerable import-| section of land for public schools. ance. Only a hundred of these ven-} The balance on the old Civil war erans remain now. We always have! debt is estimated to be in the nelgh- a good time when we meet.” borhood of ¥ million dollars, and ts . due the state for equipment and sup- Back to His Clay County Farm. plies furnished the national govern- Kansas City, Mo., Aug. 18 —Gus ment {in the Civil war. The state has Baughman, for twenty years a boss | already received $475,198 from the gambler of Kaneas City, later the| government on this claim, the origi- owner of the biggest gambling-house nal amount being 1 million dollars. in the French quarter of Tien-Tsin, | This $475,198 was appropriated to China, has returned to Missouri. the good road fund of the different “Back to my Clay county farm for coutles of the state, and the city of mine,” Baughman said, “When re- St. Louis by the last legislature to form struck China I came home.” be distributed equally, and the state The United States maintains con- auditor had already made the dis- sular courts in the Asiatic countries tribution, giving each county and and punishes Americans who violate |Sé. Louls city $4,100. Federal laws. “Judge Wilfley, of St. Louis, is The laws passed at the special ses- sion of the Missouri legislature be- came effective Monday. Perhaps the mostimportant among these are the Humphrey dramshop law and the Cooper law for the removal of dere- lict officers. The enabling act gives the cities of the state the power to regulate the charges of public service corpora- tions. The rate fs to be fixed by the elty council. It{isto be reasonable and is not to bechanged oftener than once in two years. A city council may, if it desires, select acommission to examine the books and estimate the earning capacity of the corpora- tion sought to be regulated and re- port its findings to the council. Then after the council has acted on the report and fixed the rate the compa- STATUTES STAND SUSPENDED. Montgomery, Ala., August 19.— The attorneys for the Louisville and Nashville Railroad Company have had served upon the solicitors and sheriffs in every county in Alabama notice that, by order of the United States Court at Montgomery, they are restrained from prosecuting or making arrests of any one who, in the employ of the railroad company, fails to observe the acts of the Ala- bama Legislature, which fixes rates on 110 commodities of freight and the passenger fares at 2 cents a mile, IsBagreed that such arrests would be to the great danger of human life, in that the men charged with the running and handling of trains would be taken from their posts of duty and cause others to be sent to the work who would be less capable; that the interstate passengers and freight would be greatly laid out, and that the mails would be delayed. THE RIGHT MEDICINE FOR PELVIC TROUBLES FOUND IN PE-RU-NA. RS. CAROLINE KRAMER. Fort Collins, Col., writes: “The majority of women who are saf- fering from disordered periods and other pelvic troubles, have such strong faith in doctors that they allow them to experiment on them for kidney, liver or stomach troubles until they become completely discouraged and their money is gone, “This was my unfortunate expe- rience for nearly two years when my attention was called to Peruna. 2 “I hardly dared believe that at last I had found the right medicine, but as [ kept on using it and was finally cured, — only thank God and take cour- ny has the right to appeal to the “I have had most satisfying results courte if 1t regards the rates fixed as fium the use of your medicine and have | 600 low and confiscatory. advised dozens of women who were suf-| The dramshop law is a general fering with woman's ills to use Peruns | measure, {uvolving the entire dram- — the ings yop — shop business of the state. It pre- ose Who followed my advice are Leiler today and many ore tally restored vents the brewers from holding dram to health.” ' shop licenses, but allows them to be Mrs. Wilda Mooers, R. F. D., No. 1, bondemen for saloon keepers, All | Lents, Ore., writes: applications for saloon Hcenses must “For the past four years I was a | be on blanks prepared by the attor- wretched woman, suffering with severe |ney general and tarnished by the backaches and other pains, leaving me secretary of the atate in order that so weak and weary that it was only hi he watt Th t with difficulty that I was able to attend | *hey may be uniform. The amoun to my household duties, of bond each saloon keeper must give “1 used different remedies, but |'8 $2,000 and must be signed by per- found no relief until |had tried Peruna.|gons who quality for the entire esiint WaneWell and hapny'W tions. The bond issubject to attack Oasrihe nrainn te Ava $4 by any two citizen taxpayers living _ —_ } naar the saloon, who can sue to col- German Army Officers Shocked, | lect damages on the bond for viola- tions of the law. Lieutenant Turns Butcher. The law for the removal of derelict Berlin, Aug. 17.—German army officals provides that when any tax- officers are deeply shocked at the| Payer files complaint against any news which comes from Budapest county, city or township official that a Heutenant in the Hungarian | Charging him with neglect of officlal army, Alladarstolinsky, has sent in duty, the prosecuting attorney shall his resignation to the war depart- inetitute removal proceedings in the ment, with the explanation that circuit court against the official. The having found it {mpossible to lIive|S°Vernor fs authorized to direct the decently on the $400 a year, which attorney general to assist the prose- is his salary in the army, he has de-|°Uting officer in the proceeding. cided to become a butcher. Should the complaint be against the To be able to open a butcher shop prosecuting attorney or the sheriff at Budapest, the Heutenant will have | *he circult judge shall appotns spec- to serve a nine months’ apprentice- {al officers to fill those places pending ship, but this, he declares, does not the determination of the proceeding. him, as he {esure, he says, to The trial shall be bya jury, and upon meet more intelligent and - decent conviction the officer shall be remov- people among the butchers than he ed. The official so removed has the has been able to find in the army. right of appeal to the supreme court To an interviewer representing a|®* {s now provided in civil cases. Budapest paper he has declared that The Kenney state factory inspec- he feels confident that the trade “of-| ton law, passed an the spectal ses- fers a good opening for a man of sion, is\also important. It extends education.” state inspection to factories in all Barred from Chinese Dives. cities haying 10,000 inhabitants. Chefoo, China, Aug. 19.—The order savage thing to beat a weary or starved The purpose of this law is to afd in| Pope Mfg. Co. Placed the enforcement of the child labor of Rear Admiral Dayton, in com- mand of the United Statee squadron man because he lagged in his work. So in treating the lagging, torpid liver it {s law enacted at the last regular ses- In Hands of Receiver. ston. Hartford, Conn., Aug. 19.—The here, forbidding his men from fre- quenting the low saloons, in which by J.C. Ayer Co., at a Mass. Newspaper Man Makes Big Profit in Oi! Deal. Houston, Tex., August 19.—R. Miller Hammett, of Tulea, I. T., one of the youngest and wealthiest opera- tors in that ofl field, came here and closed & deal by which he sells to John Henry Kirby, the millionaire lumberman of Texas, and J. M. Ab- bott, of Seguin, Tex., seventy-two and one-half acres in the heart of the Tulsa district. The consideration was $165,000. The sale includes five producing ofl wells, all of which are in operation. The property Mr. Hammett has sold cost him $2,900, leaving him a profit of about 6000 per cent. He was newspaper man in the territory when the oil field was discovered, and gotin on the ground floor, and he & great mistake to lash it with strong drastic drugs. A torpid liver is but an indication of an ill-nourished, enfeebled body whose. organs are weary with over Another law of importance is the Pope Manufacturing Co. was placed| Work. Start with the stomach and allied minere’s fellow servant act which ap-| in the hands of a receiver. organs of Cab iag ~ ge pom Pit Judge of the Consular Court,” Baugh- they have been robbed and got into|plles to mine operators. The law! ‘The court appointed Albert L. pe Ry your liver will become active, |™0 explained. “Not long ago he | trouble otherwise, has proved a|40esnot apply to work above the Pope to take charge of the affairs of| Dr. Pierco’s Golden Medical Discovery concluded to clean out the sporting } fatal blow to the grafters, who are| ground, such as constructing or op-| ghe company. has ry anny ae eee ing wen element in Tien-Tsin. He told Gus “losing the ‘‘dead falls” and taking | erating concentrating mille, flames} ‘The concern, which is one of the canna digestion and nutrition, It re. |%0 8e* ous of the ge I quee- yelr departure, leaving unpaid bills | OF tramways. largest in the United States, 1s cap!-| stores the normal activity of the stomach, | toned his jurisdiction. He sald you _bekind them. The admiral’s action} The Pemberton dramshop law Ie} salized at $25,000,000. It manufac- | inereases the secretions of the blood-mak- | walt tll I get through with you and ‘fe being highly commended. important to Columbia and “Boone | sures bicycles and automobiles. een, Soe egdhs 9 dno ~ you'llsee what authority I have over ‘a county, as{t prohibits the Mcensing} 4 representative of the company ine tt yt by you. Then I investigated and found of saloons within five miles of the! gaiq: { that he was right, so I came back to state university. The wording of| The receivership is due to our in- Missourl. I’m not going back to the law fe that no saloon shall be/ ability to obtain accommodation China.” Hoensed to be conducted within five} from the banks. We have plenty of miles of. state institution having/ assets that are doing an excellent snenrollment of 1,500 or more stu-! business. We can say nothing more Trim Hedges. Many newepapers over the state are calling attention to the non-en- forcement of the law regarding hedges and demanding {ts enforcement. Henry county has many miles of unlawfol hedgee, and some steps should be taken to enforce the law in r this revard has made a fortune since. Brower, son of 0. F. Browor, | uso usu yorer | ‘Phe law requires that all hedges! ‘Everybody Should Know” es was passed. It was introduced by | wealthy forniture dealer in thia city bay * ‘ along the public highways be cutand| says ¢, G. Hays, o prominent bust- Cent for] Polk of Iron county, and makes ta |eloped last night with Mise Nellie) nal rosts eiffel! tx kep$ neatly trimmed, and tf the own- | ness man of Bluff, Mo., that Bucklen’s anor to place the name of} Ryan, one of the. ers refuse to keep them so itis the fe the

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