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for you, with Make Sunshine Bread and biscuit, crullers and doughnuts, muffins and waffles, and pie-crust too. Make them pure and healthful, light aud sunny and good Baking Powder If you’ve never tried it you'll marvel at its magic touch and be sorry you waited so long. Delay no longer! Get it as fast as you can, and give the family such a treat as they’ve never had. G 25 ounces for 25 cents—one third what you've paid for inferior pow- ders. UTAH TURNED SMOOT DOWN. | The Senator Beaten at All Points in the Election. Salt Lake City, Nov.—-Utah politiclans belleve that Senator Reed Smoot, Mormon apostle, will not seek re-election, but will retire from all active participation in politics. The defeat which all his friends and his tickets suffered at the election last week will be the cause for his retirement, if he does step down and out. A movement has been started among gentile Republicans in Utah to geta petition signed by thous. ands of Republicans asking Smoot to adopt the course indicated. At the polls Utah voters delivered the most crushing, stinging rebuke to Smoot that he ever received in his political career: It was humiliating for he will have no excuse to offer for it when he gets back to Washington aud is questioned by the President and other national party leaders. His own ward in his own home town, Provo, gave the Democrats a ajority over the Repnblican ticket. chief four cities in Utah repudi- ated Smoot and his followers. Salt Lake City, the capital, gave John S Braneturd, American, a plurality of 5,509 over Dr. Plummer, the Smoot- Republican-church candidate for mayor. Smoot and his crowd among the Mormons, who still sought revenge at the polls against the Americans, formed a tusion ticket for the city council. Even the American party leaders did not hope lor the election of more than four new members of Rapid changes of temperature are hard on the toughest constitution. the council, and would not bet that more than three, if that many, were elected. But the conservative anti- church-politics Mormons secretly joined with the Americans and sent tive new members to the counc!l un- der the American banner, which gives the-anti-Smoot forces a ma- jority of three in the council, Every candidate for city office on theanti- Smoot ticket was elected. A Hard Debt to Pay. “T owe @ debs of gratitude that can never be paid off,” writes G. 8. Clark, of Westfield, Iowa, “for my rescue from death, by Dr. King’s New Discovery. Both lungs were so seriously affected that death seemed imminent, when I commenced taking New, Discovery. The ominous dry, hacking cough quit before the first bottle was used, and two more bot- tles made & complete cure.” Noth- ing has ever equaled New Discovery for coughs, colds and all throat and lung complaints. Guaranteed by F. T. Clay’s drug store. 50c and$1.00. Trial bottle free. Given $20,000 for His Eyes. New York, Nov. 16.—A man’s eyes are valued at $20,000, according to a verdict rendered by a jury in the supreme court at Flushing today in the suit of John L. Muller against the General Chemical company. Mul- ler,‘while in the empoly of Chemical company, assisted in removing a pipe filled with sulphuric acid. The pipe burst and the acid fell upon Mul- ler. He lost the sight of both eyes and sued for $75,000 damages. The jury awarded him $20,000. Muller, who {s 29 years old, lives with his wife and two children in| Brooklin. 090000000008 All Grocers inside of a trolley car to the icy temperature of the platform—the canvasser spending an hour or 60 in @ heated building and then cing against a biting wind—know the ficulty of avoiding cold. | body so that it-can better withstand the danger of cold from changes of temperature. Costs you nothing, if you’re not pleased with your bargain. Jaques Mfg. Co., Chicago. MUST POST THE DRUNKARDS. A New York Law That Was Slipped Through. New York, Nov. 19—Signs like this may he expected soon in New York saloons: SALOON, Corner 23d street and Avenue A, KEEPER, Marcus Bissaro, FOUND DRUNK WITHIN: Domino Ferraro, 1 time. Patrick Malone, 3 times, James Jones, 5 times (x) Wilhelm Schwartzenheimer, twice, The x mark against the name of James Jones means that Marcus Bissaro mustno’t sell him another drop of liquor this year, or else Mar cus will be eent to jatl. That’s the state law that went into effect on the first of last September, but has just come under Police Commissioner Bingham’s notice. The law was passed quletly by the last legislature in aneffort of the anti-saloon league to put out of business the “favorite saloon.” In effect 1s provides that as a man has been found drunk five times in the same saloon his name should not only be posted in all saloons and drug stores as & habitual drunkard but he must be refused liquor where- ever he applies for a drink. The only trouble is that there are 12,446 sep- arate saloons in Greater New York, and he must be a widespread toper, indeed, who is known in one every of them. The New Bridge Finished. The new bridge east of Rich Hill, reports the Review, is at last com- pleted, all but the approaches, and Bridge Commissioner Ed. Borron went out this afternoon to get this work started. The bridge was built by the Kan- eas City Bridge Co. About 12 car- loads of material were consumed in _| the structure. The pliers on either side rest on solid sandstone. The main span is 151feet long. The two approaching spans are 50 fees each. Seven-inch steel eyebeame and chan- nels are used. The hand rail is of 2- inch gas pipe. The abutments are of concrete. No wood is employed in the structure except the floor and the nail strips to which {¢ {s fastened. The tubular plers of the bridge are 42 feetin lengthand 42 inches in diameter, and each contains about a carload of concrete. The structure certainly ought to be substantial and durable. The bridge has not yet been accept- He Ought to Know. Painiers have a sort of natural prejudice against ready paints; and considering the quality of some, we don’t blame them. But paint mak- ers know some things that {t might pay painters to learn; and one of them {s that paint materials can be better mixed in large quantities by machinery than by hand. Better mixed means that the paint covers better, brushes out smoother, and lasts better inthe wear. The pro- portions are very exact; another point which guess-work or hand- mixing can’t do. Devoe lead-and- zinc paint is made of the same ma- terials that good painters use; lead, zinc, color, Hnseed oil turpentine dryer; mixed together by mechani- cal means, in the right proportions. Out in Sioux Raptds, Ia., is a paint- er named T Alvastadt. He has been a good painter for 15 years and has used at one time or another nearly every brand of mixed paint known. He says that Devoe lead-and-zinc {s the best paint he ever used; covers more to the gallon, does it better, and spreads easier than any paint he ever put @ brush into. you might try it and see if he’s right. C. W. Hess sells our paint. The same good reliable and safe digestants Ike Kodolfor dyspepsia. Kodol {s the best remedy known to- day for heart burn, belching and all troubles arising froma disordered digestion. It {s pleasant to take and affords relief promptly. Sold by Clay’s drug store. Hawberries a Trap for Game. From Minneapolis Tribune. Black hawberries are now furnish- ing delicious meals for hunters {n the mountains. They are also being de voured by bears, and they are being picked off the branches by coons and opossums. Indeed, the black haw- berry {s one of the real food products of the woods, and there is no danger ofa lost person starving so long as they stick to haws. You can’t convince a mountaineer that the haw fs not a food. The only trouble about it is that it takes a great many berries to make a ban- quet. It is the thick, mealy flesh surrounding the seed that is eaten, and in home sections housewives make them into a sort of jelly, which fs not halt bad as a spread. Experienced hunters make it a practice to look for bears and grouse in the vicinity of a clamp of haw bushes, and they are generally suc- cessful in finding the game there. The berries grow in large clusters, like elderberries, and quart can be picked in a few minutes. CASTORIA«A. Bears the Tha Kind You lave Aways Booght Aigaature at Attorneys For Mrs. Romadka Said She Was Being “Railroaded.” Chicago, Nov. 18.—After a trial which lasted only eleven minutes, Mrs. Evelyn Romadka, the wealthy Milwaukee woman who was indicted for various burglaries in this city, was sentenced by Judge Brentano to ‘mprisonment in the penitentiary for the indeterminate term of one to ‘wenty years. Her counsel declared in court that she was being railroad- ed to prison for the purpose of shetld- ing other persons. Earlier in the day Attorney John F. Donovan of Milwaukee, counsel for Mrs. Romadka, announced his intention of applying to Judge Bren- sano for a lunacy commission to ex- amine the prisoner. This was not done because of a disagreement re- garding the proper method of defense, and Mr. Donovan {n court expressed a desire to retire from the case. Per- mission todo this was refused by the court. Attorney S. C. Herren then addressed the court, declaring that Mrs. Romadka was being rail- roaded to prison for the purpose of protecting other people, who prefer- red to see her in the penitentiary rather than in an asylum. T. J. Cain of Oshkosh, Wis., the father of Mra. Romadka, asked per-| | mission to explain his attitude in the case, but Judge Brentano would | | | not permit him to talk. The court asked Mrs. Romadka what attorney she desired to repre- sent her. She replied Mr. Donovan, but asked that her plea of guilty entered originally on her arralfin- meat be allowed to stand. She also said she would like to have thecourt pass sentence at once. Attorney Herren then declared that Mrs. Romadka was incapable of judging what plea was proper to make and asserted that she was be- ing “railroaded,” The trial proceeded formally as if a plea of “not guilty” had been en. tered. The taking of evidence was brief, and Judge Brentano immedi-| %°-* ately pronounced sentence, Mrs. Romadka is the wife of a trunk manufacturer of Milwaukee. She was arrested and convicted of belug accessory to the burglaries and larcenies of Albert Jones, @ negro. How a woman of her social position came toshare fn his plunder has never been explained. Jones made a free confession when arrested, and {s awalting sentence. CASTORI. A. ; Boars the sha Kind You Have Always Bought Signature of opf/Utheu Slight Delay in Transit. When Uncle Bob Miller came up the Missouririver in 1846 on the] Office in court house, steamboat Tobacco Plant, from Columbia to Liberty, to establish | the Tribune, he had two bundles of bed clothes his mother gave him, says the Liberty Tribune. In one bundle wasa feather bed and an empty tick. The other one was a smaller bundle. The steamboat crew overlooked unloading the bundles at Liberty Landing and they were car- ried on to the Upper Missouri river. When the steamboat returned from the mountains {n the fall the larger bundle was brought back and left at Liberty Landing. Uncle Bob getting {t all right. Recently the smaller bundle was shipped to Uucle Bob from a point away up on the Mis- souri river. The explanation was made that {t was found covered by sand inan oldsteamboat warehouse. His name and address were still ona tag as he had written it when a boy of 18 years, in starting from Colum- bia. The two “comforts” are in good shape, the sand preserving them. They were well tacked by his ¥8 A li t : i i i if “f te eee | papisetden & OD., SSATB, oil WOMAN RAFFLES TO PRISON (Successor to G. B. Hickman.) Undertaking, Embalming and Funeral Director. Gives prompt attention to all busl- ness entrusted to him. Graduate of St. Louis School of Embalming. Agent for White Bronze Monuments. Office’Phone 35. Residence 'Phone 268. bueceve PILE UINIMENI CURES NOTHING BUT PILES, A SURE and CERTAIN CURE known for 15 years as the BEST REMEDY for PILES. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS, SHARDSGN MED. 02., ST. LOUIS. Gem City Business College QUINCY, ILL, nitanoe 1400. Annual manship and heauti- ful Illustrated Ca . L. ELMAN, Pi Gem City Business Colleze, Quincy, IL The Missourl Pacific Time Table at Butler Station, CORRECTED TIME TABLE, s0UTH BOUND, Joplin & Southwest mall & Ex 5:05 am C & Joplin mail & Express 12:86 p m <.C. & Joplin mall & Express 9:30pm Local freight 11:15am NORTH BOUND, No. 200 Kansas City and St. Loule Ex, 5:25 m No. 208 Kansas City mail and +¥| aa 12:36 p m No, 210 Kansas City limited mai 10:59 pm LOCAL FRKIGUT No. 292 Local Freignt 11:55 8 m Wo, 252 Kansaa City stock 3:35 pm INTERSTATE DIVISION, WEST BOUND. So. 741 Local freight and Pas mixed 8:00am EAST ROUND, 40, 742 Local freight and Pas mixed ar5:00 pm No. 713 Sunday Passenger (00 am No. 714 Sunday Pasaenger, arrives 12:30pm EK, C, Vanpervoort, Agent. JOHN F, HERREL & SON Make a Speciality of Farm Insurance and Real Estate BUTLER,MO, DR- |. Ms CHRISTY; Diseases of women and Children a Specialty Office The Over Butler Oash Depart- ment Store, Butler, Mo, Office Telephone 20. House Telephonel0. r DR. E. N. CHASTAIN. I Butter, - Mo, Office over Bennett-Wheeler Mer. Co, Residence High Street. Residence Phone 195. Office Phone 213, _ Reena DR. H. M. CANNON, Dentist, BUTLER, - MISSOURI. WILL BE IN : ADRIAN EVERY FRIDAY, prepared to do all kinds of den- tal work. B. F. JETER, Attorney at Law and Justice, Office over H. H, Nichols, East side square, Butler, Mo. DR, J. T. HOLL DENTIST. Rutrance, tame thatlead to Hagedorn’s studio,north side square, Butler, Mo, T. C. BOULWARE, Physician and § . Office North Side utler, Mo. Gneams ot wean’ ak, Clay’s drug store north side square. | 8 specialty.