The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, February 17, 1910, Page 9

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rE EEE Tuberculosis Scott's Emulsion It is the standard treat- ment prescribed by phy- sicians all over the world for this dread disease. It is the ideal food-medi- cine to heal the lungs and build up the wasting FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS Bend Ho., name of paper and this ad. for . our beautiful Savings Bank and Child's Sketch-Book. Each bawk contains a Good SCOTT & BOWNE, 409 Pearl St., N.Y, CHARGED DRYS WON BY FRAUD AT WEBB CITY. Contest to Be Begun at Once— Retaliation at Joplin is Promised. Joplin, Mo., Feb.—Charging nu- merous instances of illegal voting, | leaders of the wets in the recent local option campaign in Jasper county and its larger towns have announced they will contest the dry victory at Webb City. The dry majority was 67. The annonncement that the returns would be contested followed the re- turn of J. C. Ammerman from St. Louis, where he was in conference with brewery interests. According to members of the Wet Campaign Committee, which will con- duct the contest, 50 men living at Lakeside, a suburb outside the cor- porate limits of Webb City, cast dry ballots when they were not entitled to vote. Contest on the county election is promised on the ground that Oronogo, a town of about 2,500 people, should have been allowed to vote upon the -proposition separately instead of as a portion of the county. Technical flaws in the publication of the election notices also is submit- ted as additional ground for the ac- tion. An attorney for the committee _ said that formal proceedings will be \\ filed Thursday or Friday. \Leaders of the dry campaign say thatany contest on the result in Webb City or.the county will be followed immediately br similar action against the wets, who won in Joplin. Took All His Money. Often alla man earns goes to doc- tors or for medicines, to cure a stomach, liver or kidney trouble that Dr. King’s New Life Pills would uickly cure at slight cost. Best for constipation, jaundice, anc debility. 25c at F. T. Clay’s. Senate Endorses Peary For Ad- miral. Washington, Feb.—Promotion to the high rank of rear admiral as one of the honors to be bestowed upon Commander Robert E. Peary, U. S. N., for his achievement in discover- ing the North Pole, received the in- dorsement of the senate. ‘ The Hale bill, adding Peary’s name y to the list of rear admirals in the navy ~ and providing for immediate retire- ment with the highest pay received by one of the rank, was favorably re- ported by the committee on naval af- . fairs and was iately without or.comment. A similar measure .was offered in| ceedings appear to be the honor seek- the house by Representative Allen, of|}ing the man. He welcomed Presi- | What is the Cause of the Meat Boycot? | During the present campaign‘in the | 6th district, and in others in recent | years, we have become familiar with | the argument to the farmer that his |prosperity is due to the protective | tariff. He is told every day that the high prices he is getting for corn and wheat, for cattle and hogs, have been | produced by a high tariff. The same | people have also told him that a high | tariff meant high wages for the work- ers in the cities and factory towns of the country, and enabled them to pay jhigh prices for the products of the | farmer. Now, a situation has devel-| joped which shows the insincerity of | these claims. The wages of the work- jers in the protected industries are ; such that they can not buy the pro- +ducts of the farm. The high tariff national administration rushes, with great outcry, into an inquiry into the cost of living. A gigantic boycot jagainst the use of meat for food is ‘organized. It has its origin in the | cities and factory towns, where are |located the principal industries pro- tected by the high tariff of the Payne- | Aldrich law. It is directed against the farmers. | The great meat packers, the beef | trust people, will get their profits, | ORo@s0@t RS escRse Rio RRs SOR: ORD | whether meatis high or low. They | | buy the live animal, They sell the | dressed carcass, and its byproducts. | They will get their profit. The man- | ufacturer, with his products held up |to unnaturally high prices by a pro- tective tariff, and by trade combina- | tions, gets his. | But, these people, protected by { |laws framed by themselves, protect- jed by combinations permissible by \the laws themselves have framed, |and protected by combinations in de- | fiance even of their own made laws, | begrudge any like measure of pros- | perity to the farmer. Boasting in one breath that the good prices the farm- er receives for his products are due to their tariff; in the next breath, they organize: a boycott of national proportions against the principal pro- ducts of the farmer, to force down the prices that he may suffer for the benefit of city and factory workers employed by themselves. _ ” Let the employers of labor in pro- tected industries pay their men wages enough to buy meat with. Then they need not seek to array the cities against the country, the wage worker against the farmer. Let them sell their products to the farmer at the natural prices, dependent upon sup- ply and demand, as the farmer does, and has always done, and not seek to injure him, for their own beneft, by this new form of combination. The success of the movement would mean tocrush the farmer between the protected trust employer, and its workers, between the upper and the nether millstone. The farmer is the one sought to be burned by the “crossing of the wires.’’ Won't Need a Crutch. When Editor J. P. Sossman, of Cornelius, N. C., bruised his leg bad- ly, it started an ugly sore. Many less. Then Bucklen’s Arnica Salve healed it gen ag Nothing is so rompt and sure for ulcers, boils, anon bruises, cuts, corns, sores, pimples, eczema or piles. 25c at F. . Clay’s. " Mr. Taft Properly a Mason. We offer you safe drugs as can We practice absolute cleanli- We are able to meet any com- @) Over-drafts........ 3,453.22 petition in price, quality | { sath a nobg f Bonds and stocks re 12,979.69 ity considered. j Paveretate Sundays depa pm. | Real estate (including bank building)..... 30,747.58 We seenel.btk Seemanneen, ent Ti arrive ia Furniture and fixtures 1,300.00 accuracy is our safeguard. 3) Freight traine do not carry passengers, Title Abstract Books................. 1,000.00 | All freight for forwarding must be at depot | Cash and due from banks........... 168,927.81 CLAY’S | The Missouri Pacific have through | Surplus and Und. Profits.. . 98,850.15 "ah 7 oer Package car service which , delivers Total Deposits.................-0000s .... 556,434.44 5 merchandise from New York in But- an avnd ane ko AUCTIONEER ’ ler on the fifth morning out, fourth | Total Liabilities. .... re $765,284.59 Z morning delive from Cincinnati Resources as published under Official General Live Stock and Farm Sales. | and Cleveland, third morning from | call of June 23d, 1909.............. 653,833.47 St heeden May Yoke aelnees on | mamnapons. an Chicago, | second WE Rs sssvacesssccsesies $111,451.12 licited. Let me arrange your bills. 16-2m* with everything needed such as Furniture, Stoves Tinware, | a Enamelware, Sewing Machines, | TEXAN BITTEN’ ° GOOD, HONEST, SQUARE-DEAL Medicines like those of Dr. R. V. Pierce of Buffalo, warrant their makers in printing their every ingre- dient, which they do, upon their outside wrappers, verifying the correctness of the same under oath. This open publicity places these medicines in a class all by themselves, Furthermore, it warrants physicians in prescribing them Toei as they do in their worst cases. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery Is a most potent alterative or blood-purifier, and tonic or invigorator and acts especially favorably ia a curative way upon all the mucous lining surfaces, as of the nasal passages, throat, bronch- ial tubes, stomach and bowels, curing a large per cent. of catarrhal cases whether the disease af fects the masal passages, the throat, larynx, bronchia, stomach (as catarrhal dyspepsia), liver, bowels (as mucous diarrhea), or other organs. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription Is advised for the cure of one class of diseases only—those peculiar weaknesses, derangements and irregularities pecul- iar to women. It is a powerful yet gently acting invigorating tonic and nervine. = For weak, worn-out, over-worked women—no matter what has caused the break-down, “Favorite Prescription" will be found most effective in building up the strength, regulating the womanly functions, subduing pain and bringing about a healthy, vigorous condition of the whole system. A book of particulars wraps each bottle giving the formula of both medicines and quoting what scores of eminent med- ical authers, whose works are consulted by physicians of all the schools of practice as guides in prescribing, say of each ingredient entering into these medicines. Both medicines are non-alcoholic, non-secret, and contain no harmful habit-forming drugs, being composed of glyceric extracts of the roots of native, American, medicinal, forest plants. They are both sold by deste in medicine, You can’t afford to accept as a substitute for one of these medicines of known composition, any secret nostrum, Don't do it, eel Sh ok ok ok Uk Ue Ue UU LOU OU \ fr 5 ‘ 5 Missouri Pacific Time Table 5 The Walt BUTLER STATION. As rendered to the State Bank Commissioner under call of November 16th, 1909: RESOURCES Money loamed...........ccsseeaeaeeneneees $546,876.29 Condensed Statement of the \ Missouri State Bank} and \ n Trust Co} We Want to fill your prescriptions, Following is corrected time of trains: _ we wo be obtained in any market. @| {' a" K, C. Stock 22, Local Freight 292. ; Trains South (No, 209... Trains North (No, 20%... ness, carefulness and pri- vacy in this department. aah ae 208 Local Freight 29t....” | not later than eleven o’clock a m or be held | | for following daye forwarding Freight for, | Int-ratate Division must be delivered before f | fveo’clock p. m, No freight billed for this | | train in morning, E, U, VanpERvoort, Agent. § Total Resources $765,284.59 NORTH SIDE SQUARE. “The right place.” LIABILITIES Capital Stock...........scec seen eee ee eneees $110,000.00 Your business so-/morning from St. Louis, Will be| glad to furnish you routing orders | Spruce, Mo., R. F.D. 1. which will insure quick time. SE 8 BOR RS ee PO SS BS BSS SB SSSA BHR mH OR. J. M. NORRIS, Eye, Ear and Throat Specialist | | | Eyes Tested Free and Glasses Prop-| erly Fitted. Office on south side | over Times Office | ail IT'S WORTH Carpets and Rugs arpets and Rug DR. E. N. CHASTAIN oe Also repair old furniture. Come and see us. Phone 38. Butler, Mo WH I LE ; — t— r : icat i Se a Residence High Street | South side square Butler, Mo. Res. Phone 195 Office Phone 213 DR. J. M. CHRISTY BY FALSE TEETH. Diseases ot Women and Children a Specialty 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 d almost immed-| was that owing to the prominence of McAlester, Okla., Feb. 14.—Grand Master Muldrow of the Grand Lodge of Masons desires to correct a state- ment attributed to him saying that he questioned the constitutional right of the Ohio Masons to. make President Taft a Mason on sight. He said the Constitution of the Grand Jurisdiction of Oklahoma for- bids making a Mason on sight, but that of Ohio does not. His criticism President Taft it might make the pro- Steps on False Set and Will Sue Kansas City Depot Company. when he is bitten by a man, he can have the man arrested, or else take a baseball bat to him; but when one is bitten by a pair of stray false teeth, of whom shall he get redress? Henry Wilson, of Dalhart, Tex., says one should sue the owner of the land on which the vagrant molars were last seen wandering. And so he vows to sue the Kansas City Union Depot Company, if he doesn’t die from hydrophobia, because he was bitten in the heel by a set of false teeth. : Kansas City, Mo., Feb.—When one | is bitten by a dog, he can kill the dog; | Office over A. H. Culver Furn. CO. BUTLER - MISSOURI | Office Phone 20 House Phone 10! DR. J. T. HULL men who are individually successful and col- lectively able to safeguard your interests. | | DIRECTORS. | | | ‘ Wm. Seelinger, J, W. Eggleson, B,P Powell, Dentist Dr.J.M. Christy, _E, E. Morilla, M.A. Carroll, Entrance - sam: " C. A, Lane T. W. Legg, C. R. Radford, ee oe St, beads to R. L | J. BR, Jenkins, R. A. Piggott, W. A. Stimpson, North sid Butl Mi * Wesley Denton, R. F. Harper, * Alva Deerwester orth side square utler, Missouri | J. E, Thompson, J. R. Simpson. 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. PEOPLES BANK, “The Bank on which you can always Bank.”’ 6O YEARS’ 1ENCE Percheron Stallions, Mares, & Fillies For Sale I 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 top notchers. If you buy from home parties you always have a recourse if it is not as represented. Farm three miles notheast of Butler. Telephone 4 on 125.

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