The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, July 16, 1908, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Maybe Somebody Has | Fooled You! | People don’t get wealthy by | paying the highest price, but by getting the most for their money. That is why more rich people drink Arbuckles’ Ari- osa than any other coffee. ARIOSA is the cheapest good coffee in the world. AKSUCKLE BROS., Now York City. It is not generally known that a teappened to VV. Boyer down on soldierofthe revolutionary war, who she Frank Houts farm. Boyer was fought under George Washington, sa belong wrasse and his mower clogged lived {n Lawrence county, and that so she horses stopped. He got off his remains are buried fn a little neg- vend whe pulling at the grass to get lected graveyard just east of Stinson, s outof the sickle. He had pulled twelve or fifteen miles northwest of ae several hand falls of grass when Mt. Vernon. His name was William De aaw a big rattler striking at him Dilday and in an early day he enter- every time he reached for grase The ed eighty acres of land in Turnback saake was fastin the sickle barso it bottom, and bullt a email grist mill crald not reach him, Ofcourse Boyer where he lived until his death. In resceated—who wouldn’s?) He got» 1875 afourth of July celebration and fiulshed the reptile He was held near his grave and $50 says It Was just the siz» of the amall raised to mark bis last resting place. ad of his mower tongue; five fees A stone wall was bulls around the eug and carried 11 rattles ands grave and two stones from his old es Se otton —Warrenaburg J-D mill were placed at his head and id ae ae PS feet as monuments, If there ts an- a T Tharp, she well knowa eale® Osher soldier of the revolution burled | au as the QT Moore hardware iy goushwest Missourl no one has * seore, bas an iuberesting efvii war ever heard of it —Ex. : fut) e stape ofa big knife, which te tatter, she late Jacob Tharp, se The following advice about roads sred at Arkansas Post in 1863. )3 from “Outing”, a magazine which The elder Thatp traded a pocket Yaturally believes in good roads. The ; cntte to one of the confederate pris. "emedy for bad roads, its seems to ere for she big weapon mentioned ™e, les wholly with the men who Le ts 16 inches long and evidently OW5 Froperty along them. Elect no ome manufactured and made from ™an to the position of overseer who # tasp or tile, and enclosed in a scab. does not understand how to make sard. A i. Tharp used it tn later K00d roads out of poor ones. It pears for enttIng corn when residing Shere {sno such man in your nelgh- pon histarm, When this big knif-!borhood, hire one from outelde. was placed in a show window recent This 1s ninety-nine times out of a . | y it atsracted no little atvention — hundred, the wisest thing to do, for Sowads Mall the chances are that there !s no man sinlaiaichalesting {n the nelghborhood who has had Champ Clark was chatting with’a practical experience enough to trust sober of senators from the South the work to him. He may have in the Senate cloak room, when But- good senee, good judgment and all ‘er, of South Carolina, whom Clark that—in short, there may be the avon saw for the first time, came tp.| making of a good road builder in After Introduction Butler exchanged bim—but what you need {s a man sew remarks and then left, One of who has got the trade already learn. ae Missourl senators turned to ed. In other words, you can’tufford Clark, saylug: “To look at Butler to walt for home talent to develop its you d never suspect he wore a wood- abllisy when good outside help ts va teg, would you?” “No! exclaim procarable. Have your road tax os? Clark, suprised “Fact!” continu- | patd incash. Secure a skilled man, 4 whe other. ‘Butler was an officer and let him assume responsibility for ia the Confederate army, as you{|the work he undertakes. If you do xnow. Iv was not long before he! thie, you will stand ina fair way to tod a leg shot off. Before leaving | solve the problem of good roads.” faonpital be was supplied with an DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve isespe wmvstficlal lew. Eventually he again | clally good for piles. Recommended went to the front, and this time a bit | and sold by C. W. Hess. #9 shell blew his artlficlal member to | tie’ eee ae weoces, Sust thtok, “Clark,” reflec./4 Possum Invades a Millinery Store. rely adied the senator, “if Butler | fzad been a Union officer he would! caw be drawing a double pension.” — Ki 0. Star Tola Register, The ladies in Miss Ze Atchinson’s | millinery store on the east side of'the equare received a very severe fright Lightning Kills a Herd of Cattle. | #%. Scott Tribune, Teu head of cattle owned by Judge | 8. Hudson and kept on his pasture Thera east of National cemetery, were Milled by lightning. The lightning when a o’possum deliberately push- jed open the screen door and walked |{nto the middle ofthe store where shey were working. The screams of the ladies attracted an old gentle- man who was passing the place at ‘ gienek \the wire fence around which! the time and he kindly relieved the ‘wxp cattle were grazing and the herd |rituation by driving the o’possum ‘wxmvezulbilated. The discovery was |from the building. The ladies climb- ~made ubout sun down, when thejed down from the tops of chairs “@enants went to the pasture and {| where they had taken refuge. ound the cattle lying dead along; Where the animal came from is abe wire fence. The herd coneisted|not known. It showed signe of fight «it-nine yearlings and one cow. The| when it was being captured after be. ndge valued 1¢ at $200. ing driven from the room. | ‘Takes both to Good Wh : ‘ . f Good clover follows good i wheat, but it takes Potash to set i Starved clover won't feed the crop that follows it. Hi ot It needs a vigorous root and a sturdy growth for itself before it can gather nitrogen for you. Give it a good start by reas Potash with your phos- phates in shis Fall’s seeding of wheat or rye. ‘ The clover will do the rest—you’ll see when you cut the clover. i Clover, timothy, rye and oats, for turning under, or a crop in rotation— 2 -all need more Potash than most commercial mixtures afford. ;| We can prove by hundreds of practical field demonstrations, what a i: «5 per cent. Potash application will do—1s pounds per hundred of fertilizer. “3 Potash is profit. Buy the Potash first. * - a i Sr een emer et i cs fst A “GERMAN KALI WORKS, Monadnock Building, Chicago Dtow Yerk—93 Nessou Strest Attenta, Gs.—1224 Candler Building The Sand Pile Republic. Play to the child fe not light as frivolous as most of us think, but it fs a moet serious thing with the growing boy or girl. watched a few childr@ playing ina sand pile without realiziug howearn- est the children all are, and what bears throbs they play into their play. Children like to “make things” andasand pile allows the creative spirit full play. 1s may bea “palace,” or a house, or only a mud “‘piej” but the child is developing ite imagina- tion and the faculty of reasoning as well as imitating. Children, strange to each other, learn the first lessons ofa good government at the Sand Pile Republic. Selfichaess ie not tolerated and the spoilt child soon becomes generous, at least learns that he cannot have all and the oth- er children nothing. The spirit of fair play fe started, and the rights of ach child are respected. Liberty means to do what you wish as long as it does not tnterfere with the rights of another, and thus at the sand pile, children learn this funda- mental of good governmert. Uhil- dren who cannot play together de- velop into citizens who cannot work together for the good of all. To sharea patch of sand or a rough block makes for better men and wo- men. Areal democracy exists on the sand pile. Allcome to play and the highest equality and equal rights for all fa the rule. After the firat strangeness has worn off, the children co-operate in build- {og things {n which all have an iuter- ess. They butlté a Play City the oth- er day at our Sand Pile Republic. Theindividualism of the children was shown In their separate houses, yet they planned together and bullt to- gether the parks, school house, roads and @ unique play ground. Twigs were used as trees, roads were made smooth with odd pieces of wood, and houses were decorated with all the ornaments within reach. Oh yes, everyone Was @ citizen of Play Clty and to remain you must not break down anybody's house or fence. In the midst of this little republic, is an American flug, and around {¢ acourt house had been built, and so who says that patriotism does not devel- Op spontaneously? Fair play, clean play, !s the motto. To mature the new spirls of co-operation, to keep alive the practice of the doctrines of democracy, to build up their creative powers and ability to reason among their small fellow citizens, to culti- vate fair play and patriotism, let your children go to the Sand Pile Re- public! Sipvey A. TELLER, Director of Play School. Kennedy’s Laxative Cough Syrup acts gently upon the bowels and thereby drives the cold out of the system. Sold by C. W. Hess. Started Fire With Kerosene. Nevada, Mo.—Two children are dead and the mother of one of them ig not expected to live as the result of an accident which occurred Thurs- day night at the home of Mr. and Mrs. N. J. Stephens, three miles northwest of here. The dead: Lucy Bowers, aged 17. Roy Stephens, aged 5. Dangerously injured: Mrs, N. J. Stephens. The dead girl, who was employed in the Stephens home, tried to hasten the kitchen fire by the use of kero- sene. The oll in the can exploded, settin fire to her clothing and thatof the boy, who was standing near, and started a blaze which consumed the house and all that was in it. Mrs. Stephens was ill in bed with a week-old baby. She was not burned but the shock was so great that her life is despaired of. Federal Job For Wade Ellis. Washington, July 13.—Wade Ellis, attorney general of Ohio, has been summoned to Washington to confer with Mr. Bonaparte, Attorney Gen- eral, regarding the vacancy existing in the position of assistant to the Attorney General. The resignation of Milton Purdy, the truet buster of the department of justice, was fol- lowed by the suggestion that Mr. Ellis be appointed. “Mr. Ellis has been suggested for the appointment,” sald Mr. Bona- parte. “We have exchanged letters on the subject. The report that he has denied is erroneous, as the ap- pointment has not been offered. He is coming to Washington to see me. I expect him before Monday.” An appointment fe expected Mon- day. Whether it will be made from Washington or Oyster Bay is not known. Fhe appointment ts a presi- dedtial one and must be confirmed by the Senate. No one has} | A Fierce Fire. | Rich Hill Review, Friday A fierce fire occurred about 10 ;o’clock this morning ia the densely | populated and fashionable section of the city. j An alarm was turned in, and the fire department responded fn all pos sible haste, but on ite arrival on the scene, corner 4th and Olive, there/ was great excitement, owlng to a fear of a spread of the fierce and lurid flames, augmented by the report that a small boy wasin the burning building, but this last fear was soon disproven. The fire originated in} the commodious barn of Mr. Chas | Burrows and entirely consumed that | and anacjacent storehouse which was fall of unused household goods, etc. The fire department soon had the conflagration under control, the pressure being good and the water much clearer than common when the elty was supplied by the river The loss to barn and contents, which was total, is estimated at $500, though it is learned shat there was an Insurance of $300 in one of Mr. Prowell’s companies. It Can't Be Beat. | The beat of all teachers ts experience. C. M. Harden, of Silver City, North Carolina, saye: “I find Electric Bit- ters does all that’s claimed for it. For Stomach, Liver and Kidney, troubles it can’t be beat. I have! tried {t and find ita most excellent | medicine.” Mr. Harden fe right; it’s | the best of all medicines also for weakness, lame back, and all ie down conditions. Best too for chills and malaria. Sold under guarantee | at Frank T. Clay’s drug store. 50c, How to Test Eggs. Here is a simple way to test eggs: Place your eggs in cold water; all that are sound willturn over on thelr side and go to the bottom. If & little bad they will {ncline to raise | one end and the worse the eggs the| more they will stand on end. In view | of the stringency of the pure food law, thiseimple recoiptfor testing them will no boubt be gladly accept- | ed by those handling and selling them,—Ex CASTORIA For Infants and Children, The Kind You Have Always Bought | Bears the Signature of Welcome, Captain Jack. a We welcome to the fold Capt. Jack | Crawford, the poet scout. | Capt. Jack has been ‘heard at our Chautauquas as 4 versatile enter | tainer. To hear him recite “Where | the Hand of God 1s Seen,” is anepoch | 1n life, He has also been a Republi. | can for many years and a national campaigner for that party. tie isso | great an admirer of Roosevelt, that | he rarely could resist bringing some Roosevelt boosting {nto a Chautau- qua speech. But this year Capt Jack {s with! us. He was in conference with Mr. | Bryan at Lincoln last Sunday and) then gave it out he will take the stamp for him this fall.—Henry Co. Democrat. Just Exactly Right. “T have used Dr. King’s New Life Pille for several years, and find them ieee conte t,” says Mr. A A ‘elton, of Harrisville, N. Y. New Life Pills relieve without the least discomfort. Best remedy for conati- pation, biliousness and malaria. 25c at Frank T. Clay’s drug store. The Sea Serpent. From the Ohio State Journal, There is another sea counted for. It was seen down in the Gulf of Mexico, and easily seen, for it was 200 feet long and not over py dye distant from the port bow a Li atthree fella on tes evealeg Of fume Se ls seemed the | | | mt ac- of the igh ot wake, f not ai lor the steamshi| {te engines the boat a) : the a a teat ene ie glasses, for it remained fully 3 3 FARMERS BANK OF BATES COUNTY. We are protected against robbery by insurance and our LARGE CORLISS SAFE, guaranteed by the manufacturer to be Burglar Proof. DIRECTORS, Ciark WIx, - J.J. McKer, Frank Houuanp, J. W. Cxoate, 0. A. Hemuen, W. F. Duvatn E. A. BENNETT, Homer Dvvau., F. N, Drennan, WE WANT YOUR BUSINESS. E, A. BENNETT, Pres. W. F. DUVALL, Cashier, J. J. McKEE, Vice-Pres. HOMER DUVALL, Asst. Cashier, med ON ae ree RRR SOOPER eo eS PP Prine DUVALL-PERCIVAL TRUST CO. CASH CAPITAL, $50,000. Farmers Bank Butlding, Butler, Missour!. FARM LOANS. We have money to loan on real estate at a low rate of interest with privilege to pay atany time. ABSTR ACTS. We havea complete set of abs- tract bookr and will furnish abstracts to any Real Estate in Bates County and examine and perfect titles to same. INVESTMENTS. We will loan your {dle money for you, securing you reasonable interest on good secur- {ty. We pay faterest on time deposits. W. F. DUVALL, President, J. B. DUVALL, Vice-Prea ARTHUR DUVALL, Treasurer. W. D, YATES, Title Examiner. PPPOE A PPPLPLAPRPLPIPPPLP PAP PPIOLS PPBPP IPE OS PP ee ee PO LOD PPA PLO eee eS a ee a { Le Ay WHY DON'T YOU reso” _ | ects PILE 5 UINIMENI ‘CURES NOTHING BUT PLES, A SURE and CERTAIN CURE known for (5 yaare as the |; BEST REMEDY for PILES. SOLD BY ALL DRI..GISTS . 68., ST. Lv via sprue 2 oa “Tho Publisher's * Claims Sustained | UNITED STaTes Court oF CLAims The Publishers of Webster's International Dictionary allege tiat it ‘is, in fact,the popu- TRY IT ONE MONTH BEGIN TODAY | jar Unabridged thoroughly re-edited in every detail, and vastly enriched inevery part, wit! | the purpose of adapting it to meet the larger and severcr requirements of another genera- St, Louis Times THE AFTERNOON PAPER OF ST. LOUIS VE FEATURES EXCLUSI CONCISE ACCOUNTS IMPARTIAL REPORTS A Newspaper of Ideas, All the News-~all the Time. Your neighbor buys it. Many hundred thousands of other people read it You'll like 1, Have your news agent deliver you & copy. ° ion. We are of the opinion that this allegation t ‘ Post Card Hints Not Permitted. | most cel and accurately describes the ‘bes Voile thathas been jecscons uations, a eu reached, The Dictionary, Orders have in issued by the | as it now stan be baci Tea, Fe | edit n every detail, has nm corrected in postal department, that all dumning | over part, and is adsiirably adapted to meet i the larger and severcer juirements of a carde, bearing such notations as: generation which demands more of popular ‘We have not had a satisfactory | philological knowledze than any generation 3» | that the world hasever contained. response to our communication, edless i aid that wo refer in our judic! work as 0! “you are requested to call immedia- the highest authority in accuracy of detin|- tely,” “our representative will call | Will be tue source of constant reference. on you, please be at home,” ‘‘kindly | — vl oo call at this office at once,” and oth-; ,,., JOHN DAVIS, on ers, shall be withheld from delivery, CHARLES E. MOWRY, and that they shall be treated as The above refers to WEBSTER'S nonmaillable, as they are clearly in violation of section 498 of the post- al laws and regulations, which pro- vide that duns or bille shall be en- closed. Such reminders, as the cards mentioned are construed as duns.— INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY THE GRAND PRIZE (the highest award) was given to the Interna- tional at the World’s Fair, St. Louis. GET THE LATEST AND BEST 4 Nevada Post. btn shehs ty forall ‘Wessters: G.&C.MERRIAM CO., (area ORR ARERR MeO PusLishene, Kecrenany) SPRINGFIELD, MASS. v YOU GAN MAKE YOUR FRIENDS GLAD POST CARDS once and awhile. cH b- eed L BRICK New subjects coming” in RI ‘ daily. AND TILE CO. We have the floral, comic and scenic designs. » B 100,000—3, 4, 6, 8 inch tile now Our views of Butler and vi- ready for the market. cinity are exceptionally fine, Sinch..,§12.50 4 inch.....816.50 6 -+-$30.00 8 inch 10inch...$85.00 ; 12 inch...$100,00 CLAY'S Pr LJ Will soon have vitrified hard butld- ing brick for sale at tactory prices. Adare HM. BOOTH, Mgr. * What you buy We Stand by, Phone No. 4,

Other pages from this issue: