The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, February 27, 1908, Page 5

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aon tstalincemnh You will recognize Ar- buckles’ Ariosa Coffee in the cup, any time, by the taste. “taste’’ identifies it as Mingo Mention From the Urich Herald. J.R. Ewing has purchased a fine’ Percheron horee. | John Page's baby, which has been | quite sick with pneumonia, is report- | ed better. Wesley Dale will soon have his new Herman Ridder, of the New York Staats Z-itung, recently visited the White House but, according to the Few York correspondent for the Chi- esgo Record-Herald, be was unable to see the president. This corres- pondent says that when informed that Mr. Ridder wanted to see him Mr. Roosevelt said: ‘Oh, it’s that lim- the straight, pure Brazilian and distinguishes it from the ake - believe Mocha and Java, and sundry other mis- branded or misnamed im- postures. The improvement in the quality of Ariosa is the natural consequence of our own com- mercial development, and promises more fox the future. Sold in a sealed package only, for your benefit. ARBUCKLP BROS., New York City. F.M. Rich, who {s proving upa claim in Greely county, Kan., {8 on a visit to his father of tte Spruce neighborhood. 7 Use DeWitt’s, Little Early Risers, nt little pills. They are easy Sold by Clay’s drug store. Kodol is a ectentific preparation of vegatable acids with natural digest- ante and contains the same juices found ine healthy stomach. Each dose will digest more than 3,000 rains of good food. Sold by Clay’s drug store. Have you stopped to think how many double holidays there will be this year? Washington’s birthday February 22, came on Saturday which with Sunday, gave two holi- daystogether. Decorationday, May 30, falls on Saturday. Fourth of July falls.on Saturday, while Labor “ay which this year will fall on Mon- day, September 7, comes just after Sunday, so there will be four double holidays in 1908 It will be arather unusual thing to have three Satur- ' days when the banks will not be open, but for those who are benefitted by tho national holidays will be a great opportunity for short trips, as there will be two days’ vacation where heretofore there has usually been only one. Another thing about the year 1908 is the advent of Christmas which falls on Friday, as 1908 fs leap year. —Exchange. Mrs. Pleasant, of the Spruce neigh borhood, died of child-birth Friday, February 21. D ceased was formerly Miss Myrtle Murphy, a daughter of Nick Murphy, a promtnent farmer of that locality. Funeral services were held at the Spruce Methodist church Savurday afternoon at 3 o'clock DeWitt's Carbollzed Witch Hazel Salve ts espectally good for piles, Sold by Clay’s drug store. J.L Blake, carrier on route 1, ts holding up his reputation for bring ing in “varmiots.” Friday he brought us {n a lizard that was cap tured the day previous by Jeff Rhine- hart.—Ameterdam Enterprise. It was enakes the other day; now {t’a a lizard, Goas far as you like, Dick. Kennedy’s Laxative Cough Syrup acts gently but promptly on the bowels. Is stops the cough by sooth ing the throat and lung irritation Sold by Clay’s drug ttore. Soctalism {s making more rapid strides in politics than any party or cult ever known in this country, and {s promoted and pushed by the de- | flant attitude of the trusts and great determined m>vement to reduce the wages of labor while the necessaries of life for the people are steadily ad- vancing. There will be an end to these conditions when the real cause is discovered, that the Dingley tariff laws make it possible for the tariff _ barons to employ operatives-at the lowest possible rates in the labor markets of the world, and to sell "Columbia Herald: The military department fired a salvo of artillery ety enrollment reaching 2,500. A gun was fired for every 500 students, the regulation 3.2 inch seel rifle can- non being used. The broadside was in pursuance to orders from’ Presi dent Jesse. Dr. Jesse has issued the order fora liks salute of the 1000 and 2000 mark during his adminis tration of seventeen years. CASTORIA. Boars the The Kind You Have Always Bought thelr products to Americans at 50 to Signature Cnn 60 per cent. higher than the goods of J can be bought in Europe. The time is close at hand when the labor peo- ple will demand a fair division of the W. H. Pollard, south of Middle Grove, to.an Appeal man Wednes- profits of manufactured goods.—New | Madrid Record. : day. “From March 10 to October | 15, I sold heavy hoge—210 of them | He Protected Roosevelt. Washington, F eb —Postmaster Pat $7 and 210 at $6. Half of them | a¥eraged 290 pounds and others) A " Lave 240 pounds. I never lose | General Meyer, after conferring with ahog trom cholera becauso | use a the President about Post-Office nom- aimple but effective preventative, | nations, aie the Priest wenld | send to the Senate the nomination For 200 hoge I mix a barrel of ship- | °°” stuff slop, to which I add one box of of Daniel E Sullivan to succeed him- concentrated lye and eight teaspoon- eclt es postmaster as Cripple Creek, : |Colo, When the President was cam- Tes comer aanine | patgning in 1900 for Vice President jhe was insulted by a hoodlum at and it keeps them free of worms, | Cripple Creek, =e was Sullivan which causes cholera.”—Paris Ap |who promptly knocked the man peal. down aud settled the disturbance. “Lhit it on bogs this year,” said A Boston schoolboy was tall, weak and sickly. His arms were soft and flabby. He didn’t have a strong muscle in his entire body. The physician who had attended the family for thirty years prescribed Scott's Emulsion. NOW: To feel that boy’s arm you would think he waseapprenticed to a ) blacksmith. ‘ ALL DRUGGISTS; 500. AND $1.00. arn completed. ~—=—S A. B. Chelf and wife have beer quite poorly with the grippe but are reported much better. Mrs. Hollingsworth has returned to her bome tn Iowa after an extend- ed visit with her brother, A. B. Ram sey. ; Frank Hedges and wife have gone to housekeeping in Aaron. B. F. Gregory recently purchase a fine team of mules of G. W. Hart; a few days later Mr. Gregory sold the same team to Wall Bros. of Blairs- town. Walter Scott came !n from western Kansas for a visit with relatives here. He reports that a fine coun- try. The Republicans held their town- ship convention at Hackler Satur day afternoon. R E. Harrison, J. H. Douglass, and Dr. Miller were del- egates to attend the convention at Butler Monday. Mrs. Adame’ little grandson died at her home near Aaron last week The little child with its parents, Mr. and Mrs. Highly, was here visiting when the little one took sick and died. We extend sympathy to the bereaved ones. Mrs. W. M. Stayton te at Kansas City selecting her spring stock of millinery goods. Clay Willeockens have moved to their home he purchased of A. R Gregory near Mayesburg, known as the Aunt Polly Stark farm. CSCASTORIA sare the o Kind You Have Always Bought Bignaturo of A Soneca photographer sent this defense of batchelors to the Hustier: More crimes are committed by mar- nied men than by single men. There are 775 wife murders {n the United States every year, and all are com- mitted by married men. Again, con- sider the crime of demoncide, or mother-in-law killing. Its practice is confined entirely to married men. And forget not the lesser felonies and misdemeanors. How could a alngle man elope with his wife's slater? How could he desert his children? How could he commit bigamy? How could he flirs with his wife’s mata? How could he be accused 0 port? What incentive is there for him to cheat his gas meter, swindle the installment man or rob his brother-in-law at poker? Being pros- perous, well fed and happy—as all batchelors are—why should he steal, forge, embezzle burgle or fight. non-sup- . Carthage Prese: There was a time when {¢ was the policy in the Carth- age police court to call iu a negro jury to try a colored man, but there is no such practice now. The change {gs due, moreover, to the negroes them- selves, for the colored juries did their work so well that the black man who now jars 4 city ordinance down on his head pleads guilty and takes the fine just as certain to result if he opposes the case. No more attentive nok interested jury, the polite judge gays, ever sits In police court than one composed of six reputable color- edmen, They are fl sttered by the po- sition they are called upon to take, and they lean over to catch every word while the testimoney is being taken. They readily reach a decis- fon and almost invérlably announce @ fine that staggers the defendant and gives all his relatives a tip nev- er to again put their fate in the hands of a jury of their own color. Amsterdam Items. From the Enterprise. Frank Good and little Miss Bessie White are visiting relatives in Wild- erness, Mo. Harry Laws and wife, who have been visiting telatives in Amsterdam, have returned to their home in Pueb- lo, Col. Mrs. L. Lay, who has been ina precarious condition since giving birth to two daughters some three weeks ago, {a now reported as being out of danger. G.T. Megnin and family hauled their household goods to La Cygne from where they will ehip to thelr new home near Lockwood, Mo- Mise Nannie Armentrout had the misfortune last Thureday to catch the sleeve of hér drees on fire, while fixiug a fire. By prompt action the blaze was extinguished, but. not burned. 1 fore her right forearm was patnfully | prepares by burger envoy, he: ?” and would not see the distinyzuished German Amer ican editor. Mr. Ridder was cut to the quick by the reported utterance of the president, and sald a f-w caustic thirgs to this «ffeet: “Per- haps Mr. Rosevels, who is a poll- ticlap,when be learns that more than fifty per cent of the population have German blood iv thelr veins, may next think twice before he slurs a citiaan on accounts of bis German birth or descent. He has known me quite well for mauy years, and he knows I have never beéu a candidate for public ottice nor sought a pollt- fenl fayor for myself from any na- tional or state administration, and that Whatever Ll uid I did as a mat. ter of conviction and asa matter of self mterest. I also have the great- est respect for every citizen who takes anactive Interest {n politics, and I do not believe that thie race 1s asub- ject for vuglar criticiam.”—-Com.- moner, Bort Barber, of Elton, Wis., saye: “Lhave only taken four doses of your Kidney aad Bladder Pills and they have done for me more than any other medicine hasever done, Mr. Barber refers to De Witt’s Kidney and Bladder Pills, They are sold by Clay's drug store. Books and Babies. Walter Williams on house furnish. ing. “Books are the best furniture in any home except bables. Indeed, home cannot bo really furnished without plenty of books and at least one baby. The Malthuslan notion that bables are s'mply a necessary evil, and the commercial theory that books are only for students and silly women, are both wrong. The com bination of books and toys makes any home well furnished however bare {ts walls or unkempt {ts cor- ridors. Notonly for the baby’ssake, but for the household's welfare, this little scrap of furniture ought not to be restricted to the nursery or the kitchen, but should be in every place from reception hall to -bath room particularly both. If there are not babies enough to go sround use the Taw material at hand and send {t around as occasion permits. ‘wi baby is handsomer than a hall musical than a plano, grand, ¢quare, or upright: moro effective back- ground or frontisplece for tables, chairs or couches than anything that can be bought ready madefrom the big down town store. What tf heis not always dumb as the sofa pillow or as clean as a dolly—twin abominations unto the household gods—yet he returns full measure for all the Investment, a large and dim- pled dividend, when he smiles. Books are next to bables {n {mportance for furniture in the house {deal ”’ —Why-Lovers Like Him, Justice Joha R. Kelso, of Milwau kee, Portland’s Clackamas county suburb, is becoming popular as a marriage official. He is sent for far and near whenever apy young couple in that nelghborhood want to be married. His popularity is said to be. due entirely to his short and unique ceremony. This always ap- peals to the nervous couples. His ceremony is about as follows, alter the couple have been brought before him: “Do you people want each other?” “Wedo, we do,” isthe answer re quired. “Then, goodness gracious, have each other, for jpobody else wants you. You are married.”—Portland Oregontan. i ' i i | i ! ail Btn SAARI a a tl Ra en eet Athens Po Scie ao a Clay’s drug store north What You aly. 58 i aq’ clock or & landscape by Turner, more |", Led Out, Shot and Robbed. Colorado Springs, Col., Feb —Otto Fehringer, a druggist and wholesale liquor dealer of this city, was slog- ged, shot and robbed on country induced the merchant to accompany wished to sell. and ring valued at $1,060, aroll of diamond setting. Fehringer the man drove back to- ward Colorado Springs and the horee and buggy were found later in the heart of the city. Febringer after the departure of his assatlant walked halfa mile to the electric light plant, from which place the police and sheriff's office were notified. He was shot through the right lungand {tis feared the wound will prove fatal. A Mistaken Young Man. Aycung man preparing to steal was arrested by the Portland police, Hesald he had decided on that course because he could not live on his salary oi $72 a month. He ts only twonty-five, and has a young wile. His work is not heavy or disagree- able, He ts a “bad egg,” though there may be hope for him. Though living expenses are higher than for- merly, the right kind of a young couple can live on $72 a month, and barring sickness can even save a lit. tle of it. The right kind of a young man, with a good young woman for a wife, would be thankful and proud that he could come to a strange clty and earn a salary $72 8 month, and would do his work so well that before very long he would be promoted and could earn more. This young man has started out | with an entirely wrong view of things, and unless he can be “sound- ly converted,”’ there {8 no hope for him. Hs fall may serve to point a maral for other young men, to-wit: Make the most and best of what op- portunities you have, and becontent with your wages until by you own merits you can earn more, And don’timagine that you have tospend as much as some other young men, Live within your Income, and save a fraction of {t, whatever {¢ may be. The young man who ts going to be good for anything can and will do this, and the young woman fit to be such a young man’s wife will help Journal. The Great North Road —Two Thousand Years Old. Before we reached Hatfield, a few miles out of London, we had already been !mpressed with the magnificence of this Great North Road, which fs sald to have been built by Mr. Civsar whose headquarters were {pn Rome at the time. It is the direct route from London to Edinburgh and has been traveled for so many centuries that the earliest histories of England con- tain accounts of the movement of | No road three miles northeast of this} city, by an unknown man who had} an uncle had some fine wine which he | The robber secured adiamond stud | bills and checks amounting to $600' , anda valuable gold watch witha After shooting | The Missour! Pacific Time Table at Butler Station. CORRECTED TIME TABLE. 20UTH BOUND. - 20 Joplin & Southwest mail & Ex 5: 27K.C & Joplin mail & Express 12: . 205 K.C & Nevada mail & Express: 291 Locki freight u NORTHBOUND. . 206 Kansas City and St. Louis Ex.7:'0 . 298 Kansas City mail and ~<a 23 . 210 Kansas City limited mal 10 LOCAL FREIGHT a0 Re No No No No. 292 Looal Freignt 252 Kansas City stock INTERSTATE DIVISION, WEST BOUND. Ro. 741 Local freightand Pas mixed 8:00am Bast ROUND. So. 742 Local freight and Pas mixed ar5:00 pm . TIS Sunday Passenger 8:00am No. 714 Sunday Passenger, arrives 12:3 p @ K. C. Vaypervoort, Agent. Home Seekers Excursion. To polntsin Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, tieorgta, Idaho, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mext- co, Mississipp!, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginfa, Washiogton, Wisconsin, Wyoming. On all first and thir.) Tuesdays of each month at rate of one and one half fare plus 2.00 for round trip. Twenty-one days from date of sale. : Second class colonists rates to Los Angeles, San Francisco, Santlago and other California points $30.00, To Portland, Oregon; Tacoma, Se- attle and other northeast points $3120. City of Mexteo $34.30. On sale March 1st to April 80th 1908, E. 0, Vanpervoorr, JOHN F, HERREL & SON Make a Speciality of Farm Insurance and Real Estate BUTLER,MO, Office in court house, Dk- |. Me CHRISTY, Diseases of women and Children @ Speclaity Office The Over Butler Cash Depart- ment Store, Butler, Mo, Office Telephone 20. House Telephoneld Srey, DR. E. N. CHASTAIN. Mo. Office over Bennett-Wheeler Mer, Co, Residence High Street. Residence Phone 19, 2 Offige Phone 215, i ceaacatianciaciaiiniiliasiiia r Burier, DR. H. M. CANNON, "t Dentist, 1 Q 13 Bto-tibttt; 2 WILL BE IN ADRIAN EVERY FRIDAY, $ prepared to do all kinds of den- tal work, POOOCPEDODO 0OODDOOD ODES B, F. JETER, Attorney at Law and Justice, Office over H. H, Nichola, East aide square, Butler, Mo. DR, J. T. HOLL DENTIST. Bctranos, sane thatiesad to Hagedorn’s stndio,uorth aide square. Butler, Mo ‘troops upon 1%. Tt tsa gre oughbfare for vehicles “of all sorts, motorists and cyclists, and in these modern days there are well-worn footpaths along either side for pedes- trians. We passed scores of motors and I was sold while fn England that the popularity of motoring had no- ticeably diminished the number of firatclass travelers by ratl. We found the road for its entire length of four hundred miles in perfect con- dition; in many portions the macad- am {8 said to be nine feet thivk, Long sections of the road are olled and on no part of it was there any appreciable amount of the. duat. There are.few sharp curves and the grades are so slight that it has be come a great thoroughfare for speed- ers, with the result that there are many police traps for which one has to watch. We found that we could stop in almost any little village and get information as to just where the traps were located; as, for instance, they told us at Biggleswade, which ts & better looking place than itsname, to look out for traps just the other side of Buckden and again {n ap- proaching Weston.—From “An Inti- mate Automobile Excursion,” by Frank Presbrey, in The Outing Magazine for March. A Blind Candidate. Walter A. Kelly, a blind politician of 8t. Louls, te the latest Democratic candidate for Meutenant governor. He filed nominating petitions with the secretary of state Saturday for that office.—Cole Co. Democrat. fia T, C, BOULWARE, Physielan and Surgeon. Oftice North Side Square, Butler, Mo. Diseases of women and children 8 apectalty. %, cucxeve PILE 5 OINTMENT CURES NOTHING BUT PILES. A SURE and CERTAIN CURE known for [5 vaare as the BEST REMEDY for PILES. SOLD BY ALL DRI<.GISTS, MED. 60., 7. LOUIS. rN ON After Once Tasting Viwol no one wants an old-fash- ioned cod liver oil prepara- tion or emulsion, because Vinol is a much better body- builder and str creator for old people, weak children, and for ~~ colds, bron- chitis, etc. If it does no good we will return your money. FRANK T. CLAY, Druggist, (BUTLER, MISSOURI.

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