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of § PESESSS ey! ie Ba eRPeTCIFTS ae . Ing of ‘The Raven’ and ‘Annabel } Poe?’ ‘Any relation?’ sald the youth, | f removes ‘Hard, Soft or Calloused ont hiver Just scratch a match—light the Perfection Oil Heater— and stop shivering. Wher- ever have a room tha t's hard to heat—that the fur- nace doesn’t reach—there you'll need a PERFECTION Oil Heater Equipped with Smokeless Device) Just the thing for blizzard time or between seasons, Its genial glowing heat makes any room cheerful and cozy. No smoke— no smell—smokeless device prevents, Brass font holds 4 quarts of oil buming 9 hours. Fine ished in japan and nickel, Every heater warranted. The Gi which is so much appreciated by workers and students. Made of brass, nickel plated with the latest improved central draft bumer. = be lor de- warranted, Write our nearest agency scriptive circular if your dealer cannot supply the Perfection Oil Heater or Rayo Lamp, Standard Ol] Company (Incorporated) In Europe house care or caravans | srerapldly passing tromexpertment | tal to practical use. Ono popular) car contains a completely equipped | Kitchen and sleeping berths for six | *° 4nd out how she voted, and when | persons and has seats on top like the | it takes so long where there 1s aclose | old London ’busses,—Ex. Itch cured fn 30 minutes by Wooltord’s Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. Sold | by Frank T. Clay, Druggist. 5060 “The late Charles Eliot Norton,” | said a Bostonian, ‘used humorously | to deplore the modern youth’s pre-| ference of brawn to brain. He used to tellofa football game he once witnessed. Princeton had a splendid | player {n Poe—you will remember Mstle Poe?—and Prot Norton, think | Lee,’ said to the lad at his alde: “He, plays well, that Poe.’ ‘Doesn’t he?’ the youth cried. ‘Ishe,’ satd Prof. | Norton, ‘any relation to the great frowning. Poe.’” English Spavin Liniment ‘Why, he is the great Lumps and Blemishes from horses; also Blood Spavine, Curbs, Splints, Sweeney, Ring Bone, Stifles, Sprains, Swollen Throats, Coughs, etc. Save $50 by uce of one bottle. A wonder- fol Blemish Cure. Sold by Frank T. | Clay, Druggtet. 50-6m That blind bees make the best! honey is a discovery announced at the Maryland School for the Blind. | Report says that the statement, aroused intense interest among the) inmates of the institution and gave many of them great encouragement “Our beekeeper,” sald one of the teachers in the school, “has discover eda breed of blind bees that make he best honey on earth, and we've! got the first installment. The bees, | having through generations lost! their sight, have so keenly developed the sense ofemell and taste that they are able unerringly to pick out the| eweetest flowers.” | Does the Baby Thrive If not, something must be wrong with its food. If the mother’s milk doesn’t nourish it, she needs Scott’s Emulsion. It supplies the elements of fat required for the baby. If baby is not nourished by its artificial / food, then it requires SCOTT’S EMULSION Half a teaspoonful three or four times a day in its bottle | will have the desired effect. It seems to have a magical effect upon babies and children. A fifty-cent bottle will prove the truth of our statements. | cents to cover postage, and we will send 2 “Complete Handy Atlas of the World.” SCOTT & BOWNE, 409 Pearl St., New Yorks A Temptation. Brookfleld Gazette, Ts takes Missourt entirely too long election there {s temptation to jug- glo with the returns, CASTORIA. Bears tho Tha Kind You Have Always Coughs ture} ot VTL Lk Marriage Licenses. Marion F. Martin, Excelstor Springs Letitia F. Wright, utler, F. L. MeNew, Rich Hill. Suste Moreland, Rich Hill, Township Collectors Present First Monthly Settlement. Several township collectors have made theirfist monthly settlements with county treasurer W. R. Bell, the following amounts having been col lected to December 1, 1908: W. J. McAninch, Mt. Pleasant $2,- 224.00, ge $113.10, Jason Deardorff, Shawnee $1,- 386 62. » Cassenna Stomach Tablets are be- Deardorff, Grand River have trouble in finding them at your drugutst’s, write the Cassenna Medi: eine Company, Jerico Springs, Mo. 40-4! Real Estate Transfers. WARRANTY DEEDS, "ED Allen to James W Maxey lot 129 Adrian $2000. Ids M Hamlln et al to LillleD Mal- ley lob 10 blk 46 Rich Hill $600, Emory B. McReynolds to Anna Mabel Griffith east ¥ lot 2 blk 2 But ler, also pt see 22 Butler $500. Mary A Cass to Peter B Barts 40) a sec 30 Pleasant Gap $1500 Laura Varnes to John A Beard 100 a sec 1 Pleasant Gap $3900. Walter A Decker to B L Wainscott 180 a see 27 Shawnee $5320. AL Gilmore to Wm Foster 7 a sec | 22 Deep Water $175. J Hollingsworth to John GSmyser blk 100 Foster $600. é Phebe F Winchell to Wm Chester pt lot 4 blk 72 Rich Hill $525. John Scheurick to W F Greer 40 a sec 23 East Boone $1250. Alex Paige to Albertie Maury lots 15-16 blk 32 Amoret $1000. A Palge to Joseph Maury lots 14 15 blk 25 Amoret $100. J8 Francisco to CF Beard 10 a sec 19 Deep Water $265. A H Wilson to James S Combs lot 5 bik 1 and lots 5-6 blk 2 Peck’s add to Butler $3000. Kennedy’s Laxative Cough Syra stops the cough and drives the cold from the system, Children like {t. Sold by C. W. Hess. Leper Widow Dies, Los Angeles, Cal., Dec.—Mrs. Isa- bella Wardwell, the leper widow of a famous army officer, died in the County Hospital and will be buried in potter's field. Her case attracted nation-wide at- tention last summer, when her hus- band, Gen. Wardwell, kidnaped her from the County Hospital and fled toa hatin the Arizona mountains. He died eoon afterwards, and she re- turned tu this city. ~ Can't Sell Whiskey by Mail, Little Rock, Ark., Dec.—The Snu- preme Court decided that to solicit the sale of liquor in prohibition ter- ritory by letter or circular sent | | through the United States matis was | |in volation of the law. The case in| | that of Jullus Zinn, of Little Rock, |iquor dealer, who addressed a cir cular containing an advertisement | of his business to a resident of Perry | County. | Zinn was convicted on the charge and fined $200. He appealed to the Supreme Court, on the ground that | |sluce thecircular was sent out by) | mall the State had no jurisdiction, and that Congress is the only power that may determine what shall be sent through the mail. | The Supreme Court affirmed th: | judgment of the lower court, on the ground thatthe statute does not con | files in any way with the power of | Congress to designate what shall be carried by and what excluded from the United States mail. The statute, shecourt says, does not relate to! that subject at all, Iseimply pre | hibited the soliciting orders for the! ) sale of intoxicating liquors in terrt- | | tory where the sale of such Hquore ts prohibited. CAaAsSTORIA. | Boars the a Kind You Have Always Bought — Mighty Good Kind. Hume has more kind good people than any town of its size we know anything about thitks the Tele- phone A few weeks ago one of our) worthy citizens hada horse to die. He makes a living with his team As an evidence of thelr sympathy ‘the people “chipped in” about $60 to help buy him another horse. Luss week a widow lady who fs support | ing herself and bringing up her chil dren properly, had a hog die. She had ratsed 1¢ froma pig, counting | | on it for her winter’s meat. Through | the efforts of the children of the town | she was presented with an amonnt | of money that will more than replace ‘her loss. Yes siree, Hume may, be a! | Neel “slow,” bus {t’s a mighty good | | place in which to live. | CABSTORIA. | | Bears the The Kind You Hava Always Bought | Bignature | ‘The Freshman’s Compliment. | | Acertain college president was en |tertaining o freshman at dinner, | | when the conversation turned upon |tootball. To the student’s surprise | | the president displayed a thorough jfamiliarity with the game, and prc- ceeded to discuss it as earnestly /coming very popular It you should | as though 16 had been Greek or mathematics. Indeed, his treatment of the topic brought outso many ‘points that the freshman had over- looked that the youth was moved to | ' remark to his hostess: “Well, this talk with President Blank has showed me how truo it {s | we never meet anyone from whom | we can’t learn something.”’—Lippin- coott’s. A Dangerous Operation is the removal of the appendix by a | surgeon. v No one who takes Dr. King’s New Life Pills is ever subject ed to this frightful ordeal. They | work so qulesly you don’t feel them They cure constipation, headache, | billiousness and melarla, 25¢ at | Frank T Clay’s drug store. | Live Deer Takes Train. Ride. Cumberland, Md.—The most exeft ' ing encounter with wild animals yet! |reported took place when a Balti-, more & Ohio train, westbound, in charge of engineer James A. Hunt, was passing throughs heavily wood- ed cut, near Paw Paw, a large, five- pronged buck deer, being chased by some dogs, leaped on the tender ol | Mr Hunt’s engine from the bank above, and slid down in the coal fn’ front of the fire box, and tried to get | up in the cab, in {ts fright, to escape. . The fireman and the front brake- | man tried to capture the deer, but it | took refuge on the tank, and with | lowered head kept them at bay. The famished an{mal, with foam hanging from {ts lips, lifted the tank top and, | keeping {ts eyes on the astonish. | ed men, drank copious draughts from the water in the tank. Drinking its fill, the animal rode’ fora mile or two, and when along coal train passed on the eastbound | track leaped over on a loaded etecl | car of coal, rode for a mile, and as | the train passed through a deep, wooded cut, leaped from the train to | the bank and took refuge in the hills. | The railroad men on both trains | have not yet recovered from thetr | surpriee at the animal’s daring in boarding their trains, | Missouri, | buildings and turn the naturally Inthe Hbrary for want of seating | University News- Letter. Thas 6 girl can work her way shrough the Universisy of Missouri has been proved this year. A census of the girls cf the untverelty who are Missouri | which she opinion was rendered was} ?8talng-elther att or part-ot thetr ex: | penses while attending the University | uns recently been tuken, and shows shat a large number pay all of thelr expenses and take fall work in the | University ustie same time. Girle | work as stenozraphers, milliners, | house girls, seudent assistants, li | brary employ-s and manicures. | These positions pay from $15 to $30 | a month, The possottice vushorittes at Wash- | ngton sent an inspector to the Unt- verelty last week ana iste belleved | -hAS & separate post « ttice fur hand: | ing university mall will be establish: | od by the departme:t. The untver alty sends out weekly several wagon toads of mail in the form of cata | ‘ygues und bulletins, The Y M.C Avot Missouri, at {ts ‘anual convention wt St. Joseph, Mo., last week, voted to appropriate | Ubrary and Phystes departments | $10,000 bo purchase a park In the | Ozark reyion of South Missourl, The | @"@4 Engtoeerings buildings and for| association already owns a tract of | fifty wcres on White river fa Southern | It ts planned to erect| picturesque section into a park to be used by the stete assoctation for! *e last two years of the meatal { | cunvention purposes and for agsocta ton field work. It will be to the Y, M.C A. of Missouri what the Lake Geneva park in Wiseousin ts to the national body, The Missouri General Assembly vill be asked by the Curators of the University for an appropriation for two new buildings, » Library and a Physics building, and an addition to Muco- olvent A Reliable Remedy for ALL FORMS OF CATARRHAL AFFECTIONS Any ailment that produc- es (either as a cause or ef- fect) any inflamation or ir- the Membranes disappears at ritation of Mucous once under the emphatical- ly effective curative power of Muco-Solvent. Many prominent physi- cians are enthusiastic users of MUCO-SOLVENT, which has made for itself]! an important place in every | household. It is a preventive of seri- ous developments. Many coughe and colds mark the incipient stage of a most serious trouble. ‘ake the precaution of using MUCO- SOLVENT and nip these troubles in the bud. CW. Hess} Can Supply You ‘ashamed to show ft.’ We'll soon coun sty!e, APowders, Speak to yourg: believe it till self. the Chemistry building. The present have been In roome in the Academie the past three years have been great- ly overcrowded. At certain times tn the day many students have tostand room, The matter of establishing course of the University in one of she large citles of the state will be pre- sented to she General Assembly for action Willfam Eckstein, a student ab the Univereity of Missourt, recensly fell | helr to a $3,000,000 estate in Rus sla. Eckstein, as a newsboy tn Salt Lake City, Utah, attracted the at- tention of Judge Willis Brown, the noted Juvenile Court suthority, now of St. Loute to read an udvertisement, asking in- formation about an extled Russian youth named Kekstein, and was im- mediately remt{nded of the Itslenews- boy in Salt Lake City, Through Judge Brown’s efforts, [ckstetn proved his clatm to the estate '*Now Lean ges an education” was | the firat expreasion of the newsboy when told of his wood fortune. He ‘fsa freshman in the Agricultural Department. HORATIO HELD THE SEAT. Judge Brown chanced | Gray Haired Woman’s Onslaught Foiled by Young Man With Purple Tie. From the New York San, Every sent was taken {n the cabin ofa Twenty-third street boat of the Erte ferry the other morning when a gray hatred woman came tn walked atraight through to thetront, then stopped In front of a young map wearlng & purple necktle who satin the shird seat from the door and was reading a newspaper. “Is this the Indies’ cabin, young man?” she asked She ma’am,” seid the young man, not looking up. “Tt is, fs ik? Then get up, you loaf. ‘Tr, and give moe thas seat.” Phe other women looked up at this demand and smiled; the men—xl found something wonderfully ink r- esting in their . orning papers. Tle young man with the parple tie kept his eyes on his paper as ho @nawer “Learn 60 sp: thy, Wada, and maybe you'll get a “And you're a fiau! mother would be ashamed to own you! [demand that seat,” the gray |hafred woman rejoined. “bo you tearme, | demand that seat. That's ink your right—hide your face behind that paper. I should think you would be Still no results from the purple necktle or any other necktle, “And you're a man! Do you hear haired woman resumed. “You let me stand all the way over? I de- mand that seat. If there were more women like me they wouldn’s be standing fn the ladies’ cabin while the men elt down,” Andehe kept {t up all the way over. She stood up too. None of themen offered her a seat. -The women said to each other as they left the boat: “Served her good and right. Wasn’t she a terror?” The men looked worrted, but read hard and tried not to be consclous, The chap in the purple necktie didn’t have a happy time, but held his ground and eeat, and all the other |men thanked thetr lucky stars that | the woman hadn’t chosen them for ber tongue lashing. Friends Every Year y It’s justa matter of time. more housewives are giving up the old- high-priced, Trust-made Baking Thousands are turning to One trial does it. You'll never go back. baking or money refunded. Far bet- ter. Costs much less. 25 Ounces for 25 Cents Guaranteed under e!l Pure Food : Laws t youamong them. More and BAKING POWDER rocer. Lighter, sweeter You won't you try for your- Jaques Mfg. Ca, Chicago ee ee ig DR. E. N. CHASTAIN, Bur er, Mo, | Office over Bennett- Wheeler Mer, Co, Keaidence High Street, OMee Phone 215, Residence Phone 196, OOOO ME 8 OO berate Me CHKidit> Mawaovs of Women and spoclalty Ort ver A. HH. Culver Furniture Company, Butler, Mo Office telepho Tolephon eld Attorney at Law Omer VN Children 8 JETER, and Justice over H. WH. Nichols, square, Butler, Mo, J. T. BHULI Dk T trance, es me that to R. 1. Liddive tindlo 10 Butter, Mo {. C. BOULWARE, Phyastelan and Surgeon. Offies North Stde Square, Butler, Mo. Diseases of women and childrer a spectalsy, JOHN F. HERREL & SON Make a Speciality of Farm Insurance and Real Estate Office in court house, BUTLER,MO, LOW) PP POOR HOD OOOOPEDOOP IS O00) 000 Drs. Cannon & Sparr § Dentists, g BUTLER, - MISSOURI, % Kast Side of Square’ Telephone No, 812 3 i Ras PROVO O68 POAREOOT OOOO Stomach No appetite, loss of strength, nervous ness, Seanestn, constipation, bad tread, general debility, sour risings, and cof the stornach are all due to indigestion, Kodol re.ieves indigestion. This new disoee ory represents the natural juices of digas» tion as they exist In @ healthy stemec’, combined with the greatest known teahe and reconstructive properties. Kodel far ivspepsia does net only relieve iadigutiem end dyspepeta, but thie famous ielps all siomact troubles rornedy by oc ourifying, awestoning and ‘he mucous membranes iining the Me SS. Calk of Raverewood, W, Va., mper~ ! wes (you>ied with sour stomach ter voreaty pong Cool cured me and we are now using Kodol Digests What You Hat. Hotties only. Relieves indigustior, sow stomata palering of gk ate repared by KO. Dew iT &OM,, Sil it ‘Cassenna Stomach Tablats Contain the Active Princi- ples of the best digestants | known for Weak Digestive | Powers. The kind that 290 ABD. Does the |me? [demand that seat,” the gray, Work while the stomach |rests. There is nothing bet- ime stand while you loafers are all ter for Indigestion, Dyspep- | ~itting down, Are you going to let |sia, Inflammation, Catarrh and Ulceration of the Stom- | Get them of your druggist land insist on having the ‘Original Cassenna Stom- ach_Tablets. 40-tf wocere PILE: UINIMENI 3% CURES NOTHING BUT PUES. A SURE and CERTAIN CURE known for [5 vanra ae the BEST REMEDY for PILES SOLD BY ALI DRI OGISTS RIGRABDSON MEL. 2c... ST. uduin pe TE