The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, July 15, 1909, Page 4

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Your BOTH FAR AND NEAR SIGHTED persons can be relieved of all their eye troubles trouble with your eyes consult us. We will make a careful examination and tell you the exact trouble and give you ta Free Advice If glasses are needed we ‘ee would be pleased to sup- on, account of the Examination which is Absolutely Free N. B. JETER WEST SIDE JEWELER Improve KC Baking Powder will do it! acan. Try it for your favorite cake, —if it isn’t daintier, more delicate in flavor, —we return your money. Everybody agrees K C has no equal. Pure, Wholesome, Economical. ply you, but you are not compelled to buy of us/- Guaranteed under all Pure Food Laws Baking Get If more evenly, higher, BAKING POWDER Loathing For Snakes Forces Bridegroom to Move Home to Ireland. New York, July.—So great is his loathing for snakes, Richard Bailey, Chicago, finds it necessary to leave his native land and live ina country free from reptiles. Of course, it was easy to choose that favored land. There is only one. St. Patrick at- tended to that. Bailey is thrown into a convulsion every time he sees a snake. Recent- ly he married and he wishes to get sts himself out of the country in which snakes can be found almost any- where. “ With his bride Bailey arriv- ed in New York and went to the Hotel Walcott. “Tam leaving the United States for good,” he said. ‘I have no other al- | ternative. Large cities give no cer- tain relief. In the street I have to keep a sharp lookout for bird stores and other places where reptiles may be on exhibition. I don’t have to see them. I feel their presence. I can’t tell you how, but I know the reptile is near me and I become terribly ill. “In Ireland I can see the green fields. I have never been able to tramp on grass; I have hopped, skip- ped and jumped over it, but now I can loll in it and tramp over a coun- try road without being thrown into convulsions by seaing something wriggling.” The Farm Boy. Where can a boy derive the great- est real pleasure? That depends upon many things chief of which are the boy, his incli- nations and circumstances. On the farm the great diversity of interests and employments—while not afford- | ing the exciting diversions of city and town—do furnish wholesome recrea- tion, helpful experience and character nurturing that are undeniably good for the boy, the future man and the state and nation of which he will be an importent component. The well known journalist and lec- turer, Charles Dudley Warner, dedi- cates this eloquent apostrophe to the boy: “One of the best things in the world to be is a boy; it requires no experi- ence, though it needs. some- practice} : ; it doesn’t raise better, ; ; | seer a Cost of Advertising. The unawake merchant often won- ders how some rival “can afford to {so much money for advertis- , He is sure that he could not, uit it would bankrupt him in short to “plunge” into publicity on ; ale that the other fellow does. other fellow’ is not worry- ver the cost of his advertising for the simple reason that he doesn’t have to pay it. The competitor who cannot ‘afford’ to advertise, really, in effect, pays the bills of the man who can “afford’’ it. He pays them in the loss of busi- ness caused by his failure to adver- tise. The business he ought to have, his “share’’ of the trade in his line oes in large part, to the competitor who s it, who can afford to ad- vertise for it. The profits on the trade drawn away from the timid ad- vertiser by the aggressive one pays the latter's advertising bill, and then rf leaves a comfortable surplus, Phat is a fact Which progressive merchants are proving all the time, so it ought to have some personal significance to the overwilling to get rich before “risking’’ adequate ad- vertising campaigns. Think it over, Mr. Nonadvertiser-—Ex. Here is something that every far- mer should know: “Sprinkle lime in your stock tank and nota partical of scum will form on the water, When lime loses its strength scum will begin to form, whbich may be twice during the season; then wash Bd out the tank and repeat the dose. It | is cheap, not only harmless but | wholesome, keeps the water sweet and saves live stock. r a BOYS. The'editor of the Globe likes boys. | They are so often abused unjustly. And he often regrets that he hasn’t the power to emphasize this fact: A! boy can have a better time as a polite and well-behaved boy than as a rough. Having passed through the mill, we know, when we were a boy, we did so many unnecessary foolish things that we spend most of our time now in blushing. Here is one thing that boys can think of with profit: Good boys are always admired. By a good boy we do not mean a sissy or a mol- lycoddle. A good boy can have a better time than a boy whose parents are always worrying about him. There is nothing which promises a good time thata good boy may not do. The mean things boys do always cause them trouble. And we firmly believe that boys are getting better all the time. Yesterday we witness- ed a boy ball game, without hearing an oath or rough word. A boy should al rapidly becoming a man, and it is un- comfortable to become an unsuccess- fulman. Therefore boys should re- member that good boys are the first to be offered positions. Employers are always contending with each oth- er for the good boys. But employers always say of a boy with a bad repu- tation: ‘‘He isn’t worth powder and lead to blow him up.”’—Atchison Globe. What a Rat Will Eat. Uncle Sam says that a rat will eat sixty cents’ worth of grain ina year. Their bill of fare includes everythin, that a boy with a bottomless bread- basket eats and more, too. For in- such things as door jambs, and robes. It is calculated single pair of rats and their spring, if allowed to produce with- | out interruption and loss, would in| three years increase to more than twenty millions, Rats! | Socialist Publisher Jailed. Fort Scott, Kan., July.—Fred War-! ren, business manager of The Appeal | to Reason, a Socialist paper, publish- | |I suffered from lumbago and my ‘back was stiff and painful. I also had s bear his future in mind: he is {attacks of dizziness and could not encountered many obstacles during ‘aging statement: IF WOMEN ONLY KNEW |What a Heap of Happiness it Would Bring to Butler Homes. | ‘ing t . | Brings you hours of misery at leas- ure or-at work. If women only knew the cause— that Backache pains come from sick kid- neys. | 'Twould save much needless woe. | Doan’s Kidney Pills cure sick kid- neys. ' Butler people endorse this: Mrs. E. J. Tyler, 507 Harrison St., Butler, Mo., says: “I used Doan’s Kidney Pills and found them to bea splendid remedy for kidney trouble. | Har to do housework with an ach- sleep well at night. Finally my hus- band procured Doan’s Kidney Pills for me at Frank Clay’s drug store and after I had used them a short time I felt better in every way..”’ The above statement was given in March 1906 and on Nov. 30, 1908 Mrs. Tyler said: ‘The cure Doan’s Kidney Pills effected in my case two years ago has been permanent. I oc- casionally have an attack of backache but a few doses of Doan’s Kidney Pills never fail to relieve me.” For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name—Doan’s—and take no other. The Tactful Suitor. A youth in Trenton Whose devotion to the young woman of his choice has his long courtship, recently sought her out with this apparently encour- ed at Girard, Kan., was sentenced to! x months in jail and a fine of $1,500 by Judge Pollock Court. H Several Weeks ago Warren was ar- | rested for alleged violation of the! postal regulations in sending through | the mails a printed offer of a reward | of $1,000 to anyone who would kid-! nap former Governor William §. ! Taylor, of Kentucky, and return him to that State. A motion for a new trial was over- ruled. An appeal will be taken. The Socialists of the country have pledged $35,000 to support Warren in his de- fense. Life 100,000 Years Ago. Scientists have found in a cave in Switzerland bones of men, who lived 100,000 years ago, when life was in‘ constant danger from wild beasts. To-day the danger, as shown by A. W. Brown, of Alexander, Me., is: largely-from deadly disease. “If it had not been for Dr. King’s New Dis- covery, which cured me, I could not have lived,” he writes, “suffering as I did from a severe lung trouble and | stubborn cough.” To cure sore! lungs, colds, obstinate coughs and prevent pneumonia, its the best med- ; icine on earth. 50c and $1.00. Guar- anteed by F. T. Clay. Trial bottle free. | in.the Federal! Jealous of Her Rosy Cheeks. Lexington; -Ky.;—July.=Mrs. Kate! to bea good one. The disadvantage Phipps was arrested charged with | of the position is that it does not last| disfiguring Mary Ryan, a young Irish long enough; it is soon over; just as | £irl, who was attacked in a stable | you get used to being a boy, you | 2nd burned about the face with acid. have tobe something else, witha Mrs. Phipps is a neighbor of Miss | good deal more work to do and not| Ryan and in the girl’s delirium has lhalf So much fun. And yet every | been a constant caller to inquire about you will about the general usefulness of boys, it is my Impression that a farm without a boy would very soon | What the boy does is | come to grief. |tum, always expected to do the |thousand indispensable things that | nobody else will do, Upon him fall the life of the farm. He is the facto-| by the use of proper | boy is anxious to be aman, and is| her condition. glasses, If you have any Very uneasy with the restrictions that | 4 . ‘gare put upon him as a boy. Say what) iss Ryan was conscious when Mrs. Phipps called. On sight of her she screamed and it was necessary to hold her in bed. Miss Ryan says Mrs. Phipps told her as she attacked her: “Tf Tean’t have résy cheeks, you can’t; Everybody likes you. Nobody likes me,”’ and then threw carbolic acid in her face and cut her witha |all the odds and ends, the most diffi- Knife on the face and hands. | cult things. After everybody else is A Wet ' through he has to finish up.” —Rural- | | ist. | Sin to Wed Wife’s Sister. | London, July 12.—By a vote of 224 | to 24 the Church Council, which was |attended by the leading bishops, | clergy and laymen of the Church of England, declared that marriage to a deceased wife's sister, recently lega- lized in this country, was contrary to the moral rules of the church 4nd to the principles of the Scriptures. Furthermore, the use Of the prayer strongest terms. | \ Spot ina Dry Country. Three car loads of beer consigned to Rich Hill were in the wreck near Lone Tree last week says the Rich Hill Review. The cars were torn to pieces and beer bottles scattered over the right-of-way. It’s safe to say that the populace of that particular section —usually. a “dry” territory—had a “wet’’ celebration of the Fourth of July this year. The Higginsville Jeffersonian, for- merly owned by Jule Coe, has been sold-by the-public- administrator of | book in the service solemnizing such | editor of the Kansas City for ‘|marriages was reprobated in the | some years and has,a high reputation Lafayette county to Lee Shippey, The new proprietor has been exchange Star for journalistic ability. 2 the demand for free paper, precisely the same sort of hypocrisy that there is in the demand for taxed paper. For many of the newspapers that want to! be relieved of this burden are old! time protectionist sheets, which even! yet favor high duties on everything! else. Ofcourse, they have no influ | ence and deserve to have none. to tax private citizens for the benefit : of the steel or sugar trust. On the | 7 Percheron Stallions, Mares, & Fillies “T think it’s all right now, Alice. I managed to get access to your father the other day, and while he wouldn’t exactly give his consent 1 rather im- agine I've made some headway. He borrowed $40 of me. Surely he can’t stand me off much longer after that?” The young woman sighed. “Yes, I've heard about it,’’ she said, “and I think you've nade an awful mess of it. Father mentioned the $40 and re- marked that I'd better give you up— you were too easy.’’—Harper’s Week-y. Deafness Cannot be Cured by local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deaf- ness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucuous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hear- ing, and when it is entirely closed, | Deafness is the result, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and | this tube restored to its normal con- | dition, hearing will be destroyed for: ; ever; nine cases out of ten are caused by Catarrh, which is nothing but an; inflamed condition of the mucous’ surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for bef case of Deafness (caused by ; catarrh) that cannot be cured by; Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Send for cir-' culars, free. F. J. CHENNEY &CO,, Toledo, 0. | Sold by Druggists, 75c. | Take Hall’s Family Pills for con- stipation. | The Indianapolis News says; “There is a good neal of hypocrisy in It is! no worse to tax newspapers for the! benefit of the paper makers than it is whole we have rather enjoyed the | writhings of brethren who have for years been fighting for protection. But, nevertheless, paper ought to be ' ~ Sees Mother Grow Young. “Tt would be hard to overstate the | wonderful change i since she ters,” we Ask You To examine our state- ment of condition. People who intrust their money to a bank should know some- thing of its financial strength. : The annexed state- ment speaks for itself-- on its strength we solic- it your business. The Od Reliable OFFICIAL STATEMENT No. 616. Of the financial condition of the Missouri State Bank at Batier, Bates county, State of Misson- ri, at the close of business on the 234 day of Jane, 1908, pablished in the Bates County Record, a newspaper printed and published at Butler, State of Missouri, on the 3d day of ly, 1908 > iss RESOURCES Loans and discounts, undoabtedly good on personal or collateral, Losas, real estaie, Overdrafts .. Bonds and stook Real estate (banking honse) Other real = assvesnonscccansensnese Furniture and dxtures. Due from otber banks and banke: subject to check, Cash Wem, ...........sseeenreeee Currency Specie... Other resources as follows...... Total, LIABILITIES. Capital stock paid in... Surplus fund... ... «+ * Undivided profits, net, assinsasrenteni Due to banks and bankers, subject to check axsess: — . Intividual deposits, subject to check 2 ‘Time certificates of deposit Demand certificates of depo: Caebier’s cheeks ersanasees Bills payable and re-discounts. Other liabilities as follows....... Total ........ STATE OF MISSOURI, County of Bates. We, Wm, B. Walton, as Walton, as cashter of ssid solemply swear that the abov vement is true to the best of our knowles belief. Wa, E. WALTON, President, J, 8, WALION, Cashier. Subsoribed and sworn to before me, this 30th day of June A, D, nineteen hundred and nine, Witness my band and notarial seal on {emat] the date Inst aforesaid. (Commission- ed and qualified for a term expiring March 7th, 1911, RAY KE, MOONEY, Notary Public, T. C, Boulware, . Directors. resident, and J. B k each of us, do Correct attest: A. B. Owen, Frank M. Voris, MISSOURI STATE BANK OF BUTLER, MO. THE WALTON TRUST COMPANY Of Butler, Mo. Capital, Surplus Fund and Undivided Protits $136,000.00 Total Assets : $348,000.00 Always has money to loan on farms in Bates, Vernon, Bar- ton, Cedar, Dade and Polk counties in Missouri and in Oklahoma at low interest rates on 5 or 7 years time. Own complete Title Abstract Books to all land and Farm lots in Bates county. Will furnish Abstracts of Title to any lands or Town lots in Bates county. Fees reasonable. Issues Time Deposit Certificates, payable in six or twelve months, bearing 5% interest, for any idle money you may have. Wm. E. Walton, Pres., Frank M, Voris, Vice-Pres., Frank Allen, Sec., C. A. Allen, Ass't Sec, by long tried and business, you nothing. with it. YOUR BANK IF not, WHY not the PEOPLES BANK? This GROWING and NEW CLEAN BANK, SOLID, and with AMPLE CAPITAL, managed STRONG board of directors should be consid- ered when selecting a place todo your banking Get acquainted with the PEOPLES BANK, Use its daily market report, its desks and sta- tionery when you want to write a letter, and its large fire-proof vault when you want a place of safety for your belongings, it will cost Open an account with this bank and grow The Bank on which You can Always Bank. PEOPLES BANK BUTLER, MISSOURI. efficient officers and a All registered stock, For Sale ; invite inspection of this stock, as it will com: Pare with any of the kind in the United States, All of my horses are bred from import- ed stock and are

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