The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, December 9, 1909, Page 7

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a DOGTORS. SAID _INCURABLE— about, had pronounced incurable. Bowets and Stomach. Miss Mary Jones, 7918 Reynolds Ave., Chicago, Ill, writes: . “I can recommend Peruna as a good medicine for chronic catarrh of the bowels and stomach. I have been troub- led severely with it for over three years. “One year ago I began to take Peruna, the wonderful tonic for women, and I noticed a wonderful improvement at once, 1 took six bottles in succession and I always have it on hand to take some now and then when my cough is bad, Roosevelt to Succeed Taft. Washington, Dec.—‘‘Anyone who supposes Roosevelt will be satisfied simply to write for magazines, doesn't know the man. There can be no nfinement of this man’s energies to eae Cane He will foleee Re Africa, and then will goto the Pan- ama Canal Zone and dig the canal in two and a half years instead of five, as now estimated. Then he will be nominated and elected President once more.” This is the opinion of former Sena. tor Joseph C. ‘S. Blackburn, of Ken- tucky, who has just retired as Gov- ernor of the Ishthmian Canal Zone. Mr. Blackburn believes that under the proposed canal law Colonel Goethels will remain at the head of the engineering work, but that every other feature of the canal work will finally come under the exclusive su- pervision oi one man, who, he thinks, will be Colonel Roosevelt. “Roosevelt believes the authoriza- tion of the construction of the canal the greatest legislative feature of his administration,” coutinued Mr. Black- burn. , It is but natural that upon his re- turn to the United States he should take a most lively interest in the sub- ject.” : Hume Boy in an Explosion. Mr. Loren Galloway met with a severe and rather unheard of acci- _., dent at Joplin the day before Thanke- giving. While passing a steam laun- dry the boiler bursted wrecking the reports state that he will soon recover from’ his injuries; He is receiving treatment in a Joplin hospital.—Tele- Robust and Strong---Splendid Appetite. Mrs. EB. West, 187 Main St., Menasha, Wis., writes: : “We have used Peruna in our family for a number of years and when I éay that it is @ fine medicine for catarrh and colds, I know what I am talking “[ have taken it every Spring and Fall for four years, and 1 find that it keeps me robust, strong, with splendid appetite, and free from any illness. “A fow years ago it cured me of catarrh of the stomach, which the doctors “J. am very much pleased with Peruna.” - | Christ... RELIEVED BY PE-RU-NA “Words cannot express my praise for your tonic. I weighed only ninefy pounds before taking Peruna, now one hundred nineteen pounds,” Catarrh of Internal Organs. Mrs. B. H. Jackson, R. F, D. 5, New- man, Ga,, writes: “I have had catarrh of the internal organs for more than a year. I tried other medicines without any benefit. “I was perauaded to give Peruna a trial, and the first bottle proved a god+ send, and after-taking ten bottles I have received a permanent cure.” Saws Off Finger to Get Rest. Jefferson City, Mo., Dec. 5.— Frank Garrison, a Kansas City negro, who is serving .a- twenty-year sen- tence in the Penitentiary for murder in the gecond degree, adopted a nov- él and somewhat painful method of avoiding work. He held his right hand in front of a saw until his forefinger was severed. When asked by the’ prison officials why he had deliberately crippled himself, he said his object was to avoid work in the saddletree shop. He had previously pretended to be sick, but his ruse, was discovered by the physician and he was sent back to the shop. Garrison has served about ten years of his sentence. For a time he will escape work, but when his wounds heal a job in the same shop will be discovered for-him. Stung For 15 Years by indigestion’s pangs—trying man wna and $200.00 worth o medi. cine in vain, B. F. Ayscue, of Ingle- side, N. C., at last used Dr. King’ New Life Pills, and writes they wholly cured him. ey cure constipation, biliousness, stck headache, stomach, liver, kidney and bowel troubles. 25c at F. T. Clay’s. Killed in a Row Over Taft.. Tene ys » Dec.—Sol Brown is d Andrew McCrofy fatally wounded as the result of a quarrel at Pleasant Hill church, near here, over the religion of President Taft. After services were over Brown, ‘building and badly injuring our fel-| McCrary, Wheeler and others began| Tenn Such exposure low townsman. Word came that he|to discuss Taft’s religious views. | severe cold that settled ‘was'probably fatally hurt, but. later| Wheeler insisted that Taft was not a| At last he had to give wy work. He believer in the divinity of Jesus Christ. Brown and McCrary declar- ed that the President did believe in | Why Men Bon’t go to Church. Leslie's Weekly. The only part of the United States where people go to church as they used to.is in the South, where social customs and habits of thought have undergone least change. Some probably hold the poorer preaching of to-day responsible for the empty pews. But it should be remembered that better preaching is the preacher is no longer the oracle he once was of the community. There are, too, a vast number of social and humanitarian agencies outside the church, and with very many these interests supplant the claim of the church. Even the Sunday School, called the “right arm” of the church, has in a way worked against. church attendance. In the minds of many parents Sunday School takes the place of church for their children. So we do not find the childrenin the pews with their parents Sunday morning, as was once the custom. And when the child gets to the age when he drops Sunday school, not having pre- viously gone to church, he has no church-going habit. This, in connec- tion with weak and superficial home training, is not conductive to church support. Yet these, after all, are in a way but superficial excuses. At the root of itallis a declining sense of God and of personal accountability to him. The claim of God upon every life and the duty to honor him in the worship of the church must be pressed home upon men’s consciences. The pulpit must cease trying to excuse men for failure. Let them face the situation as a business man would do, and let them fearlessly call upon the people to respond to the claim of God. One Dollar Bargain. The Twice-A-Week Republic, of St. Louis, Mo., is making a special Christmas offer of a‘ three-year sub- scription to their paper for $1.00. This rate will positively not be good after December 31, 1909. Any num- ber of subscriptions will be accepted | - at this ridiculously low price while the rate is in effect, from December Ist to 3ist, 1909, but positively no premiums or cash commission will be allowed. The $1.00 price is absolute- ly net. The Twice-A:Week Republic is the oldest, biggest and best metropolitan semiweekly newspaper in the south- west. You should take advantage of this liberal offer and tell your friends and neighbors about it. Send your money to the The St. Louis Republic, St. Louis, Mo., with- out delay. (No. 6-5t State Adds Poultry Course. Columbia, Mo., Dec.—The Missouri College of Agriculture will shortly open a course in poultry husbandry. F. B. Mumford, dean of the college, announced that F. H., Stoneburn, professor of poultry husbandry in Storr’s Agriculture College, of Con- necticut, has been engaged to give a three weeks’ course, beginning Feb- ruary 12. This is preliminary to the opening of the regular course in the college here. “The poultry products of this State are worth $60,000,000 annually, which is five times the value of the dairy products,’’ said Dean Mumford. ‘I think this gives the poultry industry at least equal-rank with animal his- bandry and dairying.’’ Alone in Sawmill at Midnight unmindful’ of _ dampness, storms or cold, W. J. Atkin: nightwatchman; ve him a o hist but all failed till he used Dr New Disco ’s New very. “After sae hatte he writes, “I work a swell as ever.”” a / MISSOURI PACIFIC IRON Missouri Pacific Time Table BUTLER STATION. Following is corrected time of trains: Trains North {" by : K, ©. Stock Local Freight Trajnesente re 210. 207, “ oh Local Freight 291 ( West, de Kast Interstate {sandgre re eps! arrives... Freight trains do not carry passengers. All freight for forwarding must be at depot not later than eleven o’clock a. m. or be held for following days forwarding. Freight for Interetate Division must be delivered before Ove o’clock p. m, No freight billed for thie train in morning. E. C, Vanpervoorrt, Agent. The Missouri Pacific have through package car service which delivers merchandise from New York in But- ler on the fifth morning out, fourth morning woe gd from Cincinnati and Cleveland, third morning from Indianapolis and Chicago, second morning from St. Louis. Will be glad to furnish you routing orders which will insure quick time. OR, J. M. NORRIS, Eye, Ear and Throat Specialist Eyes Tested Free and Glasses Prop- erly Fitted. Office on south side 49-tf over Times Office DR, E. N. CHASTAIN Butler, Mo. Office over American Clothing House Residence High Street Office Phone 213 Res. Phone 195 DR. J. M. CHRISTY Diseases ot Women and Children a Specialty Office over A. H. Culver Furn. CO. BUTLER - MISSOURI Office Phone 20 House Phone 10 OR. J. T. HULL Dentist Entrance same that leads to R. L. Liddil’s Studio North side square Butler, Missouri DR. H. M. CANNON DENTIST Butler, Missouri East Side of the Square Phone No. 312 T. C. BOULWARE Physician & Surgeon Office North Side Square, Butler, Mo. Diseases of women and chil- dren a specialty. OREO Oe 8888 BBB B0 Where do you buy your VANILLA? What kind do -. you buy? Are you satisfied with the strength of it, or would you _prefer a better article for the Same Price We guarantee to furnish you better Vanilla than you can buy elsewhere. t OLAY’S NORTH SIDE SQUARE. “The right place.” 60 YEARS vWYS ac. ra " The highest medical authority on foods, Sir James Crichton Browne, LL.D.—F.R.S. of London, , gives the best reasons for eating more Quaker Oats In an article published in the Youth’s Companion of Septem- ber 23rd, 1909, Dr. Browne, the great medical authority on foods, says, about brain and muscle building— “There is one kind of food that seems to me of’ marked value as a food to the brain and to the whole body throughout childhood and adolescence (youth), and that is oatmeal. “Oats are the most nutritious of all the cereals, being richer in fats, organic phosphorus and lecithins.’ of the body. In conclusion he says— “It seems probable therefor the Northerners (meaning th Scotch) has been in som He says oatmeal is gaining ground with the well-to-do of Great Britain. He speaks of it as the mainstay of the Scottish laborer’s diet and says it pro- porridge in childhood.” The Scotch eat Quaker Oat: meals, duces a big-boned, well-devel- oped, mentally energetic race. His experiments prove that good oatmeal such as Quaker Oats not only furnishes the best food for the human being, but eating it strengthens and en- larges the thyroid gland—this gland is intimately connected with the nourishing processes e that the bulk and brawniness of e e measure due to the stimulation of the thyroid gland by oatmeal because it is the best of all oat- = Condensed Statement of the ' Missouri State Bank ; The Walton Trust Co _ os j As rendered to the State Bank § Commissioner under call of \ November 16th, 1909: { RESOURCES Money loaned $546,876.29 f Over-draits.......... 3,453.22 Bonds and stocks 12,979.69 4 Real estate (including bank building)..... 30,747.58 Furniture and fixtures.............6....005 1,300.00 Title Abstract Books....... Be 1,000.00 f Cash and due from banks.... .-»+ 168,927.81 f Total Resources.............. $765,284.59 { LIABILITIES CRB COR eccicsre rinses desc cies temusaat $110,000.00 f Surplus and Und. Profits.. “ 98,850.15 j Total Deposits. .......i...ccceccsveccecnees §56,434.44 Total Liabilities............. $765,284.59 j Resources as published under Official j call of June 23d, 1909.............. 653,833.47 { WRG GORA eiesa posnntadeasaten $111,451.12 PBS BSS BS BEX S FB SSS SBS MBM oes: —— — PP PSV SP BAAS BABA BOA AS SBF f ' f f f j f j f \ f f ) i f \ j f j f f j i IT’S WORTH WHILE To take into consideration the character, in- tegrity and responsibility of the men who stand behind a bank before making your se- lection of one to do business with. The directorate of this bank is made up of men who are individually successful and col- lectively able to safeguard your interests. DIRECTORS. Wm. Seelinger, JW, Eggieson, B, P. Powell, Dr. J. M. Christy, E. E. Morills, M.A. Carroll, C, A. Lane T. W. Legg, C. R. Radford, J. BR. Jenkins, R. A. Piggott, W. A. Simpson, Wesley Denton, R. F. Harper, Alva Deerwester J. E, Thompson, J. R. Simpson, PEOPLES BANK, “The Bank on which you can always Bank."’ For Sale of this stock, as it will com: horses are bred from import: ed stock and are top notchers it is not a’ represented. 125. * . All registered stock I invite inspection pare with any of the kind in the United States. All of my If you buy from home parties _ you always have a recourse if of Butler, Telephone 4 on: 6 wr 2, Oe a

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