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he Re ree - AND GET - tion under the sun in which theory PERFECT PAIR OF SPEX jand practice are so apt to differ as in No eye testing is necessary to fit ; farming. Theoretically, a horse even the very weakest eyes with the | walks from two and one-half to three jmilesan hour with a fair load. At the former rate he will cover at least | twenty-three miles in a nine and one- | half hour day and that would amount to plowing nine and three-quarters acres of corn in rows of average width, While there are men who ;plow this much corn one day after another it is certain that they do not NENTION | FARMFURROWS. | There is probably no other occupa-| A as they are fitted perfectly by bsg sereaina five-dolle- Gola Fillee have much time to uncover corn ex- oye bene hg WE cept with their boot, or pull weeds ach pair, For sale cnly at |that the plow does not happen to up- CLAYS DRUG STORE, "°°: Hasty work the first time over BUTLER, MO. r young corn is not to be advised, and ifa man plows from four to eight ,acres, and does the work thoroughly ‘ by giving the corn and the team prop- ler attention he should be given credit } Gleanings From THE TIMES [0° * 200d day's work. | Of all unhappy mortals the one who | jalways sees the bad in everything Century Ago. jmust be the unhappiest. I mean the Just twenty-five years ago to-day , person who takes a big crop asa sure the present editor -and proprietor of Sif” of low prices, good weather as a . : _| Sure sign of storm, or a day of rest as The Times took charge and has con {one that will make the work day that ducted the paper continuously since. | forows only that much harder, These In that issue appeared the an-' people remind me of the old woman! nouncement of the nomination of, who, according to story, claimed that! Grover Cleveland for President and |it always made her feel worse to feel Thomas A. Hendricks for Vice-Presi-| better because she always felt worse dent of the United States by the Na-| afterward. tional Democratic Convention held in Chicago. In that issue appeared the follow- ing announcements for county offices: ! LOOKING BACKWARD. Columns a Quarter of a There is nothing so difficult about sewing a rip in a tug ora line if you have the necessary material and para- | phernalia at hand. That is the point, ne aetol Pigs A Ries to always have these things at hand. ’ * | It onl a li Saunas tate | jIt only takes a little forethought to be ¥ sure, but forethought is so much Brown, W. 0. Jackson, Thos. J. {harder than “‘bindthought’’ that it is | ; pays the penalty of a trip to town! Ste nau to Gane |often when work is pressing and pays | , - '. 'y . r arness oaker . Ae T)) g Catron nominated. County deinen: mureess aiken Woe Meoping an A. Neptune for south and J. N. | Bricker for north precinct. County! Three or four years ago’farmers as Surveyor, Marshall L. Wolfe. aclass were much opposed to the in- Johnstown Items: To-day we had |vasion of tho country roads by the the much needed rain and farmers' chug wagon. Some of the more ex-; are rejoicing, this will make the oats | excitable were for petitioning state! crop good, flax that was sown early legislatures and branding all persons ; is doing weil and corn in this locality owning or operating the said vehicles is doing fine. jas criminals, To-day altogether a, A notice of a big ratification meet-' different attitude is assumed. Horses ing at Rich Hill, a procession of 100 have become pretty well used to the Butler Democrats headed by the band ' new vehicle and hundreds of farmers drove to that town. Were met at'have adopted the more rapid method | Shobe by a commitee from Rich Hill of travelidg. Most of us in fact are | and escorted into that town. Speeches looking forward to the day when we, ! were made by Mayor Wolfe and ‘too, can make miles seem like min-| Judge J. D. Parkinson. jutes. Who said that farmers were! Chas. T. and T.’ P. McFarland left ' slow? i for overland trip to the west in quest If you are feeding a lot of potato! of health. ; P | bugs the sooner the finishing process PP dorcel ne jis begun the better for all concerned } Ellis, President: Pat Marchy Vice- ina good crop of tubers. Paris green | i é : isa good ‘‘finisher.”’ It will put a} Pres; Aubury Ewing, Sec'y; Joe | Finish on the hardest feeder that the | 7° oye iis edveiia rs | Pateh contains in almost less time , B St OF te adverusers ' than it takes to tell about it. were: McFarland Bros, L. G.} Henry, Lefker-Childs & Co., Walton| To some the idea of feeding oats in & Tucker Land Mtg Co., Christopher the bundle may seem like a shiftless; & Jackson, C. Denney, Butler Natl; way of doing, but I am quite in favor | Bank, Bates County Natl Bank, Lyon [of the plain. My experience is that & Williams, H.-H. Pentzer, J. E. Tal-|for calves and horses not doing heavy | bott, T. D. Rafter, Geo. W. Weaver, | work, as in the winter, there is no: R. R. Deacon, Bennett-Wheeler & {better way to feed oats than in the: Co., Franz Bernhardt, T. W. Childs, |Sheaf. The combination of grain and Sam’l Levy & Co. roughage makes oats fed in this way | - cenit “hit the spot,’’ Store away several | loads before thrashing and test this , advice next winter. awl and some waxed ends. | A Square Deal Is assured you when you buy Dr. Pierce's ii | family medicines—for all the ingredi- | There is one and only one advan- | ents entering Into them are printed on {tage of being school director that I the meena oes a ote Battle si iknow of, that is that you get to visit are ai under oath as being comple . i andcorrect. You know just what you are | With all the pretty high school grad-; paying for and that the ingredients are , uates when they come around to ap- gathered from Nature's laboratory, being | ply for your school. Each is so un- [92 ne Beeler a eralerer ag ere | like the other and has such a differ- medicinal roots found growing In our American forests and while potent to cure | ent way of getting at the purpose of ‘delicate women and children, Not a drop | her visit that they are a welcome di-' of alcohol enters into their ben epee version to the day. rel Red oe tag aly mn Those who follow old man Greeley’s if iT i jes of its in} ae * alte s Mant raTTSU corkentie and anti: | conditions altogetber different now! cent. fe i poipearine lays an im nt part {n)was coined. Irrigated farming was. the cure of indigestion, dyspepsia and | Practically unheard of then. It is all ‘weak fomseh. attended by sour risings, | poor appe ite, gnawing feeling in stom-|’Tis no wonder when dams like th j ach, biliousness and kindred, derange- | Pathfinder in Wyoming are made—i Besides guring all the above distressing 500 feet wide at the top, 215 feet ailments, the"Golden Medical Discovery mombranes, as catarrh, whether of the | gj i 4 re A Hi SS Sixteen feet thick at the crown.. The are perfectly harmless even to the most j A much better agent is used both for ex- Teiined glycerine, This agent possesses jadvice about going west will find ‘ferment, nutritive and soothing demul- than when “Go west young man” | ierce’s Golden Medical Discovery in eraauee vasat soocee. they talk about in the West to-day. | ments of the stomach, liver and bowels. is a specific for all diseases of the mucous {high, 100 feet thick at the base, and or pelvic orRans, Even in its ulcerative | watering of nearly 100,000 acres will & will yield to this sovereign rem- | be possible from this reservoir. - some i edy rg hing “pape In Catarrh of the Nasal it is well, while taking the “Golden Medical Dis- covery” for the necessary constitutional | Some time ago we declared that it was our intention to make an applica- two or shy ‘ines a aay eh De Aad | tion of salt to some burdocks the next . Catarrh Remedy, This co! . urse time they were cut. I am informed: f treatment generall; worst | H e : ies ‘by one subscriber that salt wil) do no sod lune aections gxcopeezn- 00d, but that a little kerosene put) covery ® ie bestia [on cach plant will absolutely kill it. | ‘by. : Congesting ot | Another says that cutting the plants Ris: joff below the crown will absolutely ft be ex. bring about their destruction. - at bat for all) You hear it said frequently that can be taken. itwice in fewer years than I could! ,always cleanse the system, curing Qgear Niedt, once councilman of this I's a Good Sound Common Sense Policy To use medicines only of KNOWN COMPOSITION, and which contain neither alcohol nor habit-form- ing drugs. It is foolish—often dangerous to do otherwise. The most intelligent people, and many of the most successful, conscientious physicians, follow this judicious course of action. The leading medical authorities, of all schools of medicine, endorse the ingredients composing Dr. Pierce’s medicines. These are plainly prifited on wrappers and attested under oath. There's no secrecy; an open publicity, square-dea! policy is followed by the makers. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription THE ONE REMEDY for woman's ailments, sold by druggists, devised and gotten up by a regularly graduated physician of vast experience in treating woman's peculiar diseases and carefully adapted to work in harmony with her delicate organization, by an experienced and skilled specialist in her maladies. THE ONE REMEDY for woman's ailments, sold by druggists, which contains neither alcohol (which to most women is the rankest poison) or other injurious or habit- forming drugs. THE ONE REMEDY for women, the composition of which is so perfect and good that its makers are not afraid to print its every ingredient, in plain English on its outside bottle-wrapper, and attest the correctness of the same under oath. We have a-profound desire to avoid all offense to the most delicate sensitiveness of modest women, for whom we entertain the most sincere respect and admiration, We shall not, therefore, particularize here concerning the symptoms and peculiar ailments incident to the sex for which Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription has for more than 40 years proven such a boon, We cannot, however, do a better service to the afflicted of the gentler sex than to refer them to Dr. Pierce’s Common Sense Medical Adviser, a great family doctor book of 1000 pages, bound in cloth and given away gratis, or sent, post-paid, on receipt of 31 one-cent stamps—to cover cost of mailing on/y, All the delicate ailments and matters about which every woman, whether young or old, single or married, should know, but which their sense of delicacy makes them hesitate to ask even the family physician about, are made plain in this great book. Write for it. Address: Wort.b’s Dispensary Menicar. Assoctation RV Pierce. M_D.. President. 662 Main Stroor Rufala NV same pface, but this is bad, very bad| OPPOSED HUSBAND’S IDEAS | Adrian. Items From the Journal. advice. This theory has received so | many hard jolts that only the un- sophisticated—whoever they are— take any stock in the rule. I have two instances in mind where light- ning has struck in the same place) E. E, Hughes, of Amsterdam, and} Governor Johnson’s Wife Was Not Told Fannie L. Mudd, of Adrian were unit: | MISSOURI ed in marriage at the office of the Jus-| PACI FIC tice of Peace of East Boone township | June 16. L. Q. Roberts performed | IRON The relation of women to politics is the ceremony. | MOUNTAIN ‘ a subject of disagreement between! Roscoe Chambers and wife arrived | count on the fingers of one hand.—| Goy. John A. Johnson and Mrs, John- here Friday for a brief visit with his | Farmer and Stockman. son, but neither of them knows it yet. father Price Chambers, The young | More Beer Drunk A dispatch from Jackson, Mich., couple have just returned from their | jannounced that Governor Johnson, honeymoon through the South and the Identity of ‘Prominent Man,"’ From the St Paul Dispatch, Missouri Pacific Time Table BUTLER STATION in Missouri Than Ever. who delivered a lecture there, said the Gulf of Mexico. The bride was! : 0 de a lecture there, sale the Gulf of Mexico, The bride Was} Following is corrected time of trains: St. Louis Repubile. during the course of his remarks: “I one of Oklahoma's most. successful | 2 " A . " : | Traine North ( No, 204, 6.088 m Although more than eighty Missouri hope to see the time when women teachers and Mr. Chambers is em-| i a car 12:38 p.m counties are dry and the Sunday clos- will join with their husbands in po- ployed on the M. K. & T. at Sedalia. | K, ¢. stock cape ing laws are enforced more vigorous- | litical affairs. Where woman is, the After a few days they will be at home Freight 11:30 pam) ly than ever, the month of June, just atmosphere is better, and politics in Sedalia. | Tegan ogee: (Ros saps closed, shows greater consumption of Would be better with her refining in- George Argenbright marketed two} pox) aicuact n are. beer than any corresponding month fluence.” loads of hogs to Palmer here yester- Interstate } Weel teparta 7:35am. since the creation of the Office of Beer; A Dispatch reporter asked Mrs. day and received the highest price (Rast, arrives on 4265 pom Inspector, eight years ago. Jobnson what she thought of this re- ever received for hogs on this mar- BO, VANDERYUORT, Angus. The report of State Beer Inspector mark, but neglected to add that ithad ket. For them he received $7.62 1-2 Ernest Marshall will, be received by | been made by the Governor. She per hundred. Mr. Argenbright said State Treasurer Cowgill, with receipts | was told that a “prominent man” had that he recently brought one wagon more than $2,000 larger than for any | said it, so that her views would be load of hogs to this city for which he month of June on record. absolutely unbiased. received $62.50. The receipts of the office for the| And this was her reply: hopes to sell some hogs for $8 before last month were $43,663.64. Only} “I can’t help it ifa prominent man_ the price goes down, $41,494.20 was taken in during June! did say so, | don’t believe in women 1904, the World’s Fair year, when in politics. The place for woman is hogs last Wednesday night which there were more visitors in the State at home; she can have a quiet influ- brought $1530.62 net. Lew says that | than at any time in its history. No ence over man, and the woman who js the most money he ever got for June tlll now has equaled the receipts wants to do some good politically one load of hogs. of that one. ; should try fora voter rather thana George Brundige, one of the pio-| orning from St Louts. Will be The only explanation is that more vote. neer citizens and best known men in rig yes A erie tg orders beer is being consumed now than in “Governor Johnson andI do not Bates county, died at his home one- ae "se. ms cai pane former years. , always agree on the subject, and we half mile east of Adrian, Friday, July wee hoa te The office covers the entire State, have many discussions, but 1 have 2nd 1909, aged. 67 years, 9 months} om ma oo | Freight trains do not carry passengers, All treight for forwarding must be at depot notlater than elev-n o'clock a, m or be held for following dave forwarding Frelght for Interstate Diviaion must be delivered before five o’clock p. in, No freight billed for thig train in morning, KB. U, VANDERYOORT, Agent. George says he he Missourl Paedtie have through L. Palmer shipped a car load of packsge car service which dellvera merchandise from New York in Bue lor on the fif-b moraine ont, fourth ing dolivery from) Cinci. neath aod Clevelsnd, third morning from Lidinnapolia and Chfeago, second so the increase of population in St. not yet come to his way of thinking. and 14 days, Deceased was born) ; Louis would not change materially Surely the woman who has the right near Circleville, Ohio, September 18) 5 DR. FE. N. CHASTAIN the general result. influence over her husband does not 1841. The early part of his life was i : ee The wholesalers have done a big need a vote, for she canimbue him spent ona farm at the place of his Burner, Mo, : business in dry counties, many con- with right ideas, snd he will listen to birth. At the outbreak of the Civil Omce over American Clothing House: ' sumers buying beer by the barrel her if he is the right kindofa man. war he enlisted in Co. C. 79th Ilinois 3 Omen poe Eight Btteeh PY and whisky and wine by the case, ‘I would like to know who the Infantry. He returned to his home) ¢ where formerly they bought the prominent manis who says women jn Eastern Illinois, where he remain-! drinks as they wanted them. Wheth- can purify politics with her refining ed until 1879. Oct. 5, of that year he er this has had the effect of greater influence, but whoever he is I do not. was married to Miss Emma Bush, and consumption of beer has not been agree with him.” at once moved to Bates county, and determined. No check is kept onthe And Governor Johnson is coming located on their present farm just whisky and wine sold in Missouri, the home soon. east of Adrian. To this union four inspection being confined to beer. o sons were born, two, John A. and D, | ‘fee felephone ay, " oe : Lack of a Nickel Cost Him Lee, with their mother, surviving ee A Night Rider’s Raid. B. F. JETER. . . acl 1.500 Mr. Brundige. Funeral services were The worst night riders are calomel, $1,500. wtctnaeahtamaae tates. croton oil or aloes pills. They raid held at the residence Saturday after- | your bed to rob you ir rest. Not so Trenton, N. J,—The lack of a nickel noon, conducted by Elder Geo. Lentz. | Office over H. H, Nichola Butler, Mo with Dr. King’s New Life Pills. They to drop into a telephone slot and Interment was made in Crescent Hill! z'aei atde square, never distress or inconvenience, but obstinacy of an exchange girl cost cemetery. | ; : Tortured on a Horse. R. J.T. BULI ria, 2c. at F. T. Clay's. Gane en his barntwas de- accor em years 1 couldn't ride a DENYISI “ie Z | horse without being in torture f Ourpuce. tatne that load i Bi He Got One. Niedt’s barn caught fire about 10 silent Wile hoe ilesnr, of om ona Mecsas mentee” “‘What’s a pun, father?’’ o’clock Thursday, and he hastened to less, Ky., “when all doctors and oth- | “A pun, my son, is a play upon atelephone booth in the nasigiibed> | =o remeron, filet, Bucing 2 hens | goon words, There are three kinds of hood tosummon a fire engine. On Salve cured me. oh Sty ay pee OE ; ‘ - A | piles, burns, scalds, cuts, boils, fever- + puns—good ones, which you laugh being told to drop a nickel:tinto the sores, eczema, salt rheum, corns. | ! Drs. Cannon & Sparr at; indifferent ones, which you take slot he discovered he had none. 25c. Guaranteed by F. T. Clay. | Dentist no notice of, and bad ones, which He told the girl it was a case of life e eer entists, make you throw something at the and death, but she insisted that fire The “Butternut” Uniforms. f punster.”” headquarters could not be called up Bs = ago pe —_ in) “Can't you make a pun, father?” —_ without the proper charge being paid. N® Vontederate army under General | ; “Of rion my cg Now, you're Niedt aay yore ‘aout Sterling Price, says that the idea for § Mart side o square Pelgehees HOE thinking about your supper, aren’t and tore his hair in vain. | the new butternut suits of the United) §.., you?”’ The exchange girl refused to notify States was taken from the Confeder- ' deachsastihathitapniaaplnca sii “Yes, father.” the fire department, and in despair ate troops. Col. Roache says white ‘. C. BOULWARE “Well, that s’upper-most in your : Physician and Surgeon. Office he fled to another place, finally send- duck suits were issued to the troops | mind at the present time. That, you ingin an alarm. It was too late, under General Price while in Arkan- see, Led we 9 on—Here, you young however, for when the fire engine sas, and that many of the men found, North Side Square, Butler, Mo. rascal’ what did you throw that boo! at me for?’”’—Exchange. >. Realdence Phone 198. OG TOROS VERDED or - "yD TT Py Re J. Me CHRISTY, Yigvases Of women snd Children & Specialty Otfice over A. H. Culver Furniture Company, Butler, Mo. House Telephonelo, colds, headache, constipation, mala- mel RNTLER, - MISSOURI. itl a ae ene aan ed | he reached the place the barn and its jt too much work to akeep their uni-| Diseases of women and children | contents were in ashes. torms clean, so they gathered wal-| # Specialty. ‘nuts and butternuts and stained their | ~~~ ‘uniforms. At first the uniforms caus-/ Women Wreck Four Joints. /ed derision and laughter, but it was} Pittsburg, Kan., July.—Fifty-six | soon discovered that the scouts and! women were arrested at West Min- advance guards of the army could jeral, near here, on charges of disturb- |move more freely and escape detec-,ing the peace, following a raid by | tion longer than if they wore regula-| them on joints or illicit saloons. ~ The tion gray suits. As soon as this fact} places had refused to sell the women | became generally known almost all of | beer in buckets and the women, most |the Confederate troops were issued | of whom are Austrians, or other for- juniforms of this color. Now, after |eigners, after holding a mass meet- more than forty years, the United |ing, marched ina body to the joints ‘States has equipped its troops with|and completely wrecked four of them. | uniforms of almost 4 similar hue. West Mineral is a coal mining camp, : a cies cS psig : = oo Pe eS VYeak Throa—-Weak Lungs Cold after cold; cough after cough! Troubled with this a taking-cold habit? Better break it up. We have great / confidence in Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral for this work. No ‘medicine like it for weak throats and weak lungs. Ask Shag doctor. for his opinion. He knows all about it. . His b aint'ps is valuable. Fo'low his advice at all times. i No in this a . al