The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, July 9, 1908, Page 1

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1s, Frank Stroebe, R. F, D.1, Apple- in, Wis., writes: of VOL. XXX, ecklp aS BS LEE PRE RE REET Ste BUTLER, MISSOURI, THURSDAY, JULY ©, 1908. ines. NO. 37 MRS.FRANK STROEBE J was a nervous wreck. I felt no desire to live. REMARKABLE RECOVERY, THANKS TO PE-RU-NA. “I began using Peruna a few months ago when my health and strength were all gone, and I was nothing but a pervous wreck, could not sleep, eat or rest properly, and felt no desire to live, “Three bottles of Peruna made me look at life in a different light, as I be- gan to regain my lost strength. While my recovery took nearly four months, at the end of that time I was better than Jever had been before, I had a splen- did color and never weighed more in my life. “] certainly think Peruna is without arival as a tonic and strength builder, and it has my endorsement.” This lady entirely recovered from @ nervous breakdown. She did not go away to a sanitarium, and spend hun- dreds of dollars for a cure, She just steid-at-home, took Peruana, and in four monthe weighed more fan ever in her life, had a splendid color, life looked bright to her, Peruna did all this for her. What more could be expected of any remedy? Man-a-lin the Ideal Laxative. Boys Encampment Given by Farmers Bank. Weextend to all farm boys{n Bates county a cordial invitation to be our guestfor three days, August 13th, August Lith and August 15th atthe farm of J. E. Thompson, one mile north of this clty, where we have ar- ranged with the Missour! Agricul- tural College to hold what {s known asa ‘Boys Encampment.” This in- eludes all boys and young men be- tween twelve and twenty years of age. In this fssue of the paper you will find a Farmers Bank Coupon, and we ask all who accept our in- vitation to kindly sign their name, giving their address and mail st to the bank, so we can make ample ar- rangement for your comfort. There is no expense to you in any way ex- cept to bring your blankets. The bank will furolsh the tent and meals. he forenvon will be devoted to lec- tures by some of the ablest men in the state, the afternoon to demon- stration work ank games. We hope the boys will take advan- tage of these lectures and the bank will much appreciate your presence. Trusting you will decide to attend and that you will reply promptly, we are, . Faxmers Bank oF Bares County. Farmers Bank Coupon. BOYS ENCAMPMENT Gentlemen: I accept the Bank’s invitation to Boys Encampment. If you expect to attend the Boys Encampment, fill out and mail to Farmers Bank., r.J.M. Norris SPECIALIST ON THE Ear, Eye, Nose and Throat Catarrh and its effect on the ears, throat or lungs given special attention. Those in need of Glass- es can have their eyes tested free and proper- ly fitted. | OFFICE--On the South Side in the Catterlin Building. Butler, = Mo.' ' MURAT HALSTEAD PASSES AWAY. One of the Best Known News- paper Men in Country Dies of Hemorrhage. Cincinnati, July 6 —Murat Hal. stead, one of the leaders in American journalism for over halt « century, and widely known as a vigorous newepaper and magazine writer, died at his home fn thie city. At hie bed were hie wife, hie son, Robert, and one daughter, Mrs. Arthur Stem. Mr. Haletead was one of the great- est editors of the last half of the Nineteenth Century, and one of the strongest tributes to his incisivenees asa writer was in 1889, when his nomination by Preetdent Harrison to be American Mintster to Germany was rejected by the United States Senate because of articles he bad pub- Hehed charging corruption to some memberejof that body. In 1853 he became connected with the Cincinnati! Commercial, and be- came chief owner in 1865. Nearly tweflty years later his paper was con- solidated{with the Gazette, and he was editor in - of the combined bewepaper until years afterwards, when another consolidation was ef fected, new owners securing control. Fora time he was editor of the Brooklyn Standard Union. In the Civil War Mr. Halstead personally reported many battles, and during the Franco-German War and also in the Spanieh-American War, headded to his reputation as a war corre- spondent, For fifty years he attended and re- ported all Republican’ national con- ventions, and in 1860 he was the only newspaper man who reported all the varied polltical conventions of that year. Beware of Oiotments fur Catarrh that Contain Mercury, as mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely derange the whole system when entering {t through the mucous surfaces. Such articles should never be used except on prescriptions from reputable physicians, as the damage they will do is ten fold to the good you can possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J Cheney & Co., Toledo, O., contains no mercury, and is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. In buying Hall’s Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine. It ts taken in- ternally and made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. CHENEY & Co. Testimont- als free. Sold by Druggists, 75c. per bottéle Take Hall's Family Pills for con- stipation. A New Book About “Why Worry.” Wall street Journal, Doctor Walton has {ntroduced a} book on ‘‘Why Worry?” with the following words from Chwang Teze: “The legs ot the stork are long; the legs of the duck are short; you cannot make the legs of the stork short, nefther can you make the legs of the duck long. Why worry. In other worde, why worry about things which cannot be helped? Take life as it comes and make the best of | {t. There is no use complaining or worrying because one {s long and car not make himself short, or ts short and cannot make himself long, or has brains without health, or is born rich without the advantages of self government or is born poor without the opportunity of wealth. But while we cannot get rid of inequalities we can make the best of the conditionsin which we are placed. The duck cannot be astork, but he can be the best kind of a duck. That is the philosophy of individualism. The Remedy That Does. “Dr. King’s New Discovery {s the remedy that does the healing others promise but fail to perform,” says Mrs. E. R. Pierson, of Auburn Centre, Pa. “It is curing me .of throat and lung trouble of long —- that other treatments relieved only tem- porarily. New Discovery is dolog me so much good that Lfeel confident {ts continued use fora reasonable length of time will restore me to per- fect health.” This renowned cough and cold remedy and throat and The Meaning of a Smile. By Winifred Black An old man diedin Michigan the other day and left $25,000 toa young woman who wasno kin to him. In the old man’s will he sald: “I leave this money to this woman for the sake of her bright. smile. She comforted the lass monthe of my dear wife's hfe, and] never saw her when she was not ready to emile.” Twenty-five thousand dollars for a ewile! Weil, it was cheap at the price. It wae a emile that came from the heart. It it hadn’s been 1 would never have made the !mpression that it did. A emirk fe not a emile, neither isa arin. You can emirk with malice and you can grin when you feel like slam- ming the door, but you can’t emile to eave your life unless there ia kind- Mness and love in your heart. The young woman who took her youth and her vitality and her cheer- ful emile, and gave it toa elck old woman, did !¢ because she was good and she couldn’t help smiling. lam glad she fs going to get that money. I¢ fan's what we do that counts so much, after all; it’s what we are. I've been given a present with such @ mean spirtt showing in the eyes of the giver that I felt like throwing the gift into the fire, And I have been refused a favor by some one who looked at me with eo much kindness that my heart was light in spite of the refusal. Hypocriay does not pay—it never deceives anyone long. I never knew a man who lived for himeelf alone who could deceive peo- ple into liking him forlonger than eix months, I never knew @ woman who wae at heart mean and envious who could make even @ little child like her when she eim!led. Beware of the man whose smile is & mere twist of the mouth. Look out forthe woman who looks as if she had been eating something sour when she tries to smile, Give me the woman who smiles be- cause she can’t help {t and the man who laughs and doesn’t know {t. They’re the sort of people to live with. : Just Exactly Right. “T have used Dr. King’s New Life Pills for several years, and find them just exactly right,” says Mr. A. A. Felton, of Harrisville, N. Y. New Life Pills relieve without the least discomfort. Best remedy for constl- pation, bilousness and malarta. 25c at Frank T. Clay’s drug store. K. C. Star. When Wille comes home with an all day sucker on the end of stick of licorice he 1s justified in putting |The Licorice Crop to the Kids. | A YEAR IN AFRICAN JUNGLES Gallatin North Missourian: 18! has been the proud boast of many resident of Gallatin and of Daviess Kermit Roosevelt Talks o° Hig |coutty, thas this vicinisy was origin- and His Father's Plans. Oyeter Bay, N. Y., Jnly 6 —Eermit | Roosevelt, now @ youth of 20, and of a serous bent of mind, said that he would accompany his father inthe African hunt. He {s a tall, loose- jointed young man, with clear eyes, but with a soft voice and « soft tread. “I'm going with father on the ally the Garden of Eden, and some reference has always been made to the Prophet Joseph Smith for verifi- cation of that claim. Once upon a time the Chicago Inter Ocean admit ted editorially that Gallatin was builded in the Garden of Eden, and Michael Murphy received a bill trom added, “the old town hasn't changed any since. But all of this is wrong— Gallatin nor Daviess county was, fytog horses consigned trom Jen- never within the confines of the Gar- African hans,” he sald, “and will be} 42 of Eden. The Prophet Joeeph away a whole year. The arrange-|5™!th never eo declared, and Adam- ments for the hunt haye not yet been made. Asfaras 1 know father has not made any contracts for writing ond!-Ahmon, the Mecca to which al! phy a bill, slong with a statement true Mormons come, ie not the “grave of Father Adam.” The facts in this about the hunt, although he hae had | “#¢ are that the region now known many offers from everywhere. We will get away as soon ae possible and will be ous of touch with clvillzation for all of a year. “Father, you know,” he remarked, ‘4a never happy unless he fe working, and this hunt in Africa will produce practical results. He intends to seek and kill game that will prove of val- ue to the world. He will send back as Jackson county, Missour!, was Once within the confines ofthe Garden state Commerce Commission dowr of Eden. Then when Adam and Eve were expelled therefrom they imme- diately cams to that part of the beautiful valley of Grand river now they flying or running. Louielans. koown as the environs of Gallatin and dwelt. And sometime prior to hie demise, perhaps it was only a the bodies of such game to some of the human race, gathered his fam museum 60 that they may be wount ed.” “An American museum?” “HORSES IS HORSES.” So the Railroad Agent Fed a Car of Wooden Ones and Col- lected. New Orleans, La, July —Wher the Louisville & Nashville Railroac for @8 for one meal for a carload o pings, La, to Mobtie, Ala, be Irieb blood went bot, James F. Murdy, lo- cal agent for the raflroad, sent Mur for coat of transportation. Wired Murphy to Murdy: “fooc for flying horees, fe 1%. Was it ice cream or hay? I'll have the [nter- on yez"” Wired Murdy to Murphy, tn a} seriousness: “Horses is horses, b: lawe protect animals from cruelty and provide $8 for a square meal t acarload, Your animale were tn Nev short time, Adam, the progenitor of Orleans one day. Please remit.” Murphy's reply, after a filgbt ir ily around him—on that beautiful theology and a suggestion of profan hilltop, now three and a half miles tty, Indicated his opinion of the Loulk northwest of Gallatin, where heerect- ville & Nashville in particnlar, an: “Yea,” he replied. “We will nave ed an altar, offered sacrifice and all nes in general and hinted at along with us & professor from some museum who will look after the prep- aration of the bodies and the!r ehip- ment out of Africa.” “Will any one arrange for connec- tion with the outside world while you and your father are in the Afrt- can wilds?” asked the reporter. “None,” he sald. “We will be lost to clvillzation for a year.” blessed his family, and the name of place where Adam bleseed hisfamily ) and that is perhaps about the cor- rect version of what was revealed to the prophet. The way in which Mr. Tafs’s rel!g- eternal punishment hereafter, but bh: the place was Adam-ond! Ahmon (the patd the bill. place of the altar of Adam or the Murdy,!n the course Of Wine, te gan an {nvestigation. The Souther: Pacific brought the car to Algiers La, from Jennings, and the clerk as Algiers, !n transferring the shipment to the Louleville & Nashville chang ed the character of the horses tn th: fous bellef has been broached by bill of lading, eo that when Murds “And after that you will viet the] Some critics, as if they wished tocon- saw the. cocument {6 was lal continent?” “I don’t know,” he replied. vey the !mpression that he ts nota “horses,” without the wings. Nat ‘Hop {Chrievlan, has {neplred “Penn,” tn urally, Murdy, obeying the law of {f we do, father will not go answuere| the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin, humanity, ordered the horses around where there will be receptions or wny- thing of that kind.” sesfuhe World Affords “It gives me unbounded pieseare to recommend Bucklen’s Arnica Salve,” says J. W. Jenkins, of Chapel Hill, N.C. “am convinced {t's the best salve the world affords. i «ar- ed a felon on my thumb, and ‘t never fails to heal every sore, ber: or wound to which {t {s applied. 2° as Frank T. Clay's drug store. Searchers Dragged a River Coffeyville, Kas., July —The swo children of C. (, Carr, after a | varrel with thelr mother, said they were going to the river to drown tiem- selves. One of the children is & ‘oy, 10 years Old, and the other a girl, 14 years old. Their motne: nad punished them. They disappeared and & s-ar o'ng party of about 100 went to the river on some airs. For although the | sei may be poor, the stick, at least, 1s @ first quality product in ported from Spain. “The best, selected and cus sticks are soldfor the use of kids,” M. B. Andeltinger, a licorice salesman from New York, suid this morning. “The rest of the product comes from the old country in big bales. All licorice grows wild. All attempts to culti- vate {t have failed. It won't grow in America at all.” Kodol will without doubt help any- one who has stomach disorders or stomach trouble, Take Kodol to- day and continue {t for the short time that fs necessary to give you complete rellef. Kodol is sold by C. W. Hess. Saw Three Tornadoes at Once. Salina, Kas., July.—Three torna- does whirling about in the clouds and midway between the clouds and the earth, was the phenomenon wit- }nessed by people of the town of Solomon, afew miles east of here last week. The storms formed about 7 o’clock and the entire population of the town rushed out to view the spectacle. For some time they watched the funnel-shaped clouds at play and then took to their cellars. So far as known the. storms did not strike the earth. Kennedy’s Laxative Cough Syrup lung healer is soldat Frank T.Clay’s| acts gently upon the bowels and the religious aftifations of our Pres- {dents. In the evens of Mr. Taft’s election, {t appeure, Le will not be she firsts Unitarian President. Both John Adams and John Quincy Adams had Unitarfan views. Thomas Jet ferson waa accused by the opposition of sympathizing with the infidelity of Paine. Andrew Jackson, cock- tighter and duelist, was the favorite of people who disliked too “straight- laced” polittes. Tom Marshall satd of him that he cheated she devil by turning Presbyterian in his old age. Stace the time of Jefferson, all Prest dents, whatever may have been thetr private opinions have publlely matin talned an attitude of respect for th Christian rellgion. I’ may be noted ase curious fact, that so far there test that has prevailed in Presidenttal campaigns, and in canvasses for Presidential has been one religious to discourse somewhat lengthily on. to the railroad feed pens. There the crew saw the mietake smiled, resealed the car and sent tt on to Mobile. Murphy has hie $> back, but Murdy eays the man has less sense of humor than any shiy per he has encountered tn his thirts years of railroad business. DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve isespe iully good for piles. Reeommende and sold by (. W. Here Real Estate Transfers. WARK I a Stephen MeComas to VPenmbros McComas lot] A east balflosz | 2,Glaswos add to Rich Hil! $240, IJ Sedlasky to EP Grittish 40 see 1] Hudson $1400, Albers A Woods to Frank A Wo 80a sec 14 Rockville $1. Albert. \ Wood to Emma Wood s+ asec Lt Rockville $1 Albert A Wood to Alice Clark Sf with nets, hooks, dynamite and eae ‘ boats. The search was contin red COMA stONe, thas. #he_canuidate ec 1eHockvt sei for an hour or more without sucess, | MUSE But be @ Roman Catholle., J TMolerto Joba Clem 8 4 & The parents were sure the °o!!dren Grant, Hayes and MeKtuley were Lone Oxk $11 mens déotned: eredited to the Methodists: Cleveland A rdam Town €o to Ea After she river had been sragaed | 004 Harrlaon to the Preabyterlans, Kereh mult for some time, some of to. party Seeiele oe a ised ae itd started back to the city for reinforce: | seals had Eplecopalianaffiliatlons, Gilbert’ L say ww deren a! mente, Coming through e cort ag, | 804 Roosevelt ts of the Duteh Re Murphy 160 asec 17 West bk formed stock, S50Q00 they found the little boy sound asleep between two rows ot} corn. | “The water was too dari and cold,” said the girl, “and ~*ex we got to the edge and felt of 's, we de elded not to die.” “EC. DeWitt & Co., Chicago, Hl. | —Gentlemen—In i897 I hed & die: | ease of the stomaeh and bowes. In the spring of 1902 I bought 6 postle of Kodol and the benefit I received | all the gold in Georgla could aot, buy. May you Iive long and pros- per. Yours very truly, . N. Corneil, | Roding, Ga, Aug. 27,1900." Sold| by C. W. Hess. Waited For Chum and Killed Him Leuseur, Minn., July.—Robert Jer. | dine, 10 years old, {sin ‘af! here, | charged with murder in the tres de-| gree. | According to the testimony offered | before the Coroner's jary, young | Jardine shot and {nstantiy éllled’ Russel St. John, a boy of about his, Own age. } Jardine lay in walt for bis victim, | according to the testimony, snd de- liberately killed him. The svthor- {tfes are trying to ascertaln in what | i drug store. 50c and $100. ‘Irial| thereby drives the cold out of the|™enner they are to proceed against bottle free, , system. Sold by C. W. Hess. the young prisoner. Simpson patrons. & Keller SUCCESSOR TO RILEY & SON Having purchased the West Side Market we solic age of all the old patrons, and cordially invite a We will guarantee to all it the pe to become ¢ Fair °, Courteous Treatment = WE WILL FURNISH THE BEST MEATS that we can procure and at prices that are right Our aim will be to please our customers. We want your business. LOW SIMPSON, TOM KELLER. Micthha

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