The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, February 24, 1910, Page 7

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Scott's Emulsion is the original—has been | the standard for thirty-five | years. There are thousands ct | so-called “just as good” | Emulsions, but they are not—they are simply imi- | tations which are never as good. as the original.” They are like thin milk— SCOTT'S is thick like a | heavy cream. If you want it thin, do | it yourself—with water— | but dont buy it thin. FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS Sead Me. name of paper and this ad. for our deaetifal Savings Bank and Child's Skctch-Book, | Back bank contains a Good Luck Penny, SCOTT & BOWNE, 409 Pearl St., New York FARMERS BUILD RAILROADS. | The Only Lines Constructed In) Kansas Last Year Were Con- structed by Them. Topeka, Feb. 21.—It is somewhat remarkable buta fact nevertheless, | that the only steam railroads built in| Kansas during the past year were constructed by farmers. The rail- | roads spent their time and money fix- ing up their present lines. farmers went ahead ‘and built two new lines. One of these runs from Garden | City to Scott City, 42 miles. It was financed by a farmer and built with tary ns money. been placed in operation and the company is now gathering in its bonds earned from the different counties township and municipalities through which it-runs. The other road runs from Kiowa to Hardtner twelve miles. The farmers around Hardtner have wanted a road for many years but none of the old established roads could see its way clear to build the extension. So the farmers there got together and decid- ed to build the line themselves. The grade is all completed and rails are now being laid. The new road has been leased to the Missouri Pacific for twenty-five years. One farmer who helped finance the project has 30,000 bushels of wheat in his bins, which he proposes to market as soon as the new road is open for traffic. This will be in about sixty days. Saved From Awful Peril. “T never felt so near my grave,” writes Lewis Chamblin, of Manches- ter, Ohio, R. R. No. 3, “as when a frightful cough and lung trouble pull- ed me down to 114 pounds in spite of many remedies and the best doctors. And that I am alive to-day is due aoe Dr. me" 's New Discovery, -~ ia owes ao ve Bde 1 can worl four children. of anteed by F. T. Clay. Senator Tillman Near Death. Washington, Feb.—Senator Till- man’s condition is alarming. He is But the | The road has just | WHY BRIDGE. Is ‘WRONG. |It Requires. More i ~ Than the Average Person Possesses. From the New York Evening Sun. | The reason that bridge is wrong is| because it requires intelligence, and cards were intended in the beginning | to be entirely separate from sense. They were expressly invented for people who had no intelligence or for | | those who had temporarily laid theirs | aside. Cards were supposed to pro-| | tect people from general scorn who, | without them, would have sat with a} drooping jaw, lack luster eyes and idle hands. That unpleasant remark, | “Are you sitting there doing noth-| ing?’ when it is perfectly clear that | that is precisely what you are doing, | had to be warded off in some way, | and cards gradually came into use in response toa general need. Those comatose moods through which we | . all pass when we are enabled jto understand fully the cerebral | activity of a jellyfish are the moments | when one’s hand _instinctly begins |shuffling cards. The diversion and the state of mind are so ideally suited, so rightly inseparable, that one won- ders why crumbs are thrown to fishes when packs of cards would be so ap- | preciated by the more spineless in- habitants of the sea. If one’s mind wakes up in the mid- dle of a game of cards and one’s leth- jargy falls from one, cards at oe | cease to be within one’s line of vision. If one’s intelligence has been return- | ed to one there are a thousand things | for which it might be used, and _nat- | urally cards are not in the list. When | one is too old or too lazy or too dull | |cards, unless, of course, one likes | cards. Then it is a different matter | altogether. | | | Won’t Need a Crutch. When Editor J. P. Sossman, of | Cornelius, N. C., bruised his leg bad- | lly, it started an ugly sore. Many | salves and ointments proved worth- | less. Then Bucklen’s Arnica Salve | healed it thoroughly. Nothing is so — and sure for ulcers, boils, urns, bruises, cuts, corns, sores, eee eczema or piles. 25c at F. a dia Wife in Chains Two Years. The disappearance of the young wife of a druggist named Parat, whose pharmacy is near the scene of the Steinheil murder, was cleared up when the police broke in and found the woman heavily chained between the bed and the wall, horribly scar- red. In addition to the chairl, which was strongly padlocked around the neck, a cruel contrivance resembling a coat of mail, but strengthened by a belt of copper rings, enveloped the body. Both objects could be removed only by the use of keys. The woman told a pitiful tale of two year’s imprisonment and martyr- dom. Last November, while still in chains, she became the mother of her fifth child. The husband refused to call a doctor. Parat, who was arrested, declared that he loved his wife but was ex- and | tremely jealous of her. Took All His Money. Often alla man earns ones to ae tors or for medicines, stomach, liver or Kidney trouble @ that Dr. King’s New Life Pills would semen cure at slight cost. Best for indigestion, ess, ceeetes, jaundice, malaria and debility. 25c at F. T. Clay’s. _ He’s Not Too Old to Learn. Columbia, Mo., Feb.—Emil J. to either work or play one plays| § Significant Fact No other medicine for woman’s ills has any such professional endorsement as Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription has received, in the unqualified recommendation of each of its several ingredients by scores of leading medical men of all the schools of practice. Is such an endorsement not worthy of your consideration? Is it not a significant fact too that Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription Is the only medicine sold through druggists, for woman’s peculiar weaks nesses and ills, the makers of which are not afraid to print its every in- gredient on its outside wrapper? Is this not worthy of your consideration if you are a poor sick invalid woman ? = | The formula of Dr, Pierce’s Favorite Prescription will bear the most critical examination of medical ex- perts, for it contains no alcohol, narcotics, harmful, or habit-forming drugs, and no agent enters into it that is not highly recommended by the most advanced and leading medical teachers and authorities of their several schools of practice. These authorities recommend the ingredients of Dr, Pierce’s Favorite Prescrip- tion for the cure of exactly the same ailments for which this world-famed medicine is advised. A booklet of ingredients, with numerous authorative professional endorsements by the leading medical authorities of this country, wili be mailed free to any one sending name and addtess with request for same. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. It’s foolish—often dangerous to accept a substitute of unknown composition in place of this time-tried medicine of known composition. oe ORDER Bie BOBO Bir Bie Bie BHO HOD IVe lVant to fill your prescriptions. We offer you safe drugs ascan be obtained in any market. ‘ We practice absolute cleanli- ness, carefulness and pri- vacy in this department. We are able to meet any com- petition in price, ees ity considered, We excel in promptness, org | accuracy is our safeguard. : CLAYW’S; NORTH SIDE SQUARE. ¥ “The right place.’’ BENE PB BNE PAGE OREO GEORGE N. BABCOCK, AUCTIONEER General Live Stock and Farm Sales. Graduate of the Mo. Auction School! Your business so- | at Trenton, Mo. licited. Let me arrange your bills. 16-2m* Spruce, Mo., R. F. D. 1. About Poultry. Too many people in starting into the poultry business expect too much. | It is strange how much some people | expect from their fowls and how =e tle they do for them. Clean up your premises, oe the poultry houses and coops, make | new nests, and get ready for a suc-| | | Office over American Clothing House cessful season. If itis simply eggs that you want, don’t allow a male bird with your females. They will lay more eggs, the eggs will remain fresh longer, and the hens consume less food. Four things are necessary for suc- cesful poultry culture: 1. Good stock. 2. Good feed. 3. Good houses. 4. Good care. - Make.a grain mixture of corn, oats, wheat and kaffir corn and feed two quarts to every forty fowls every night and morning. If you haven’t all of these use what you have. Cover the floor of your poultry house with a straw-litter a foot deep, and throw this grain in this and let the fowls work for it. The hen is happiest 8 | mab Don’t do it. MISSOURI PACIFIC IRON MOUNTAIN Missouri Pacific Time Table BUTLER STATION. Following is corrected time of trains: Traing North / No, ™. 6:08 a m. Hi K, C, stock 2 Local Freight : aine South ig 2 22 pm, 9:46 p.m, Tosa Frei seit eo lt 80 pam, 7458.m, Ov m, 8 pm, 2.05 a.m, ( Vest, departs......... ) Kast, arrives ........... j Sundog departs .........7 arrives. Interstate Freight trains do not carry passengers, All freight for forwarding must be at depot not later than eleven o’c'ock a m or be held for following days forwarding Freight for Interstate Division must be delivered before five o’clock p. m, No freight billed for this train in morning, E, U, Vanpervoort, Agent, The Missouri Pacific have through ~| package car service which delivers | merchandise from New York in But- Jer on the fifth morning out, fourth | morning ow gg | 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-| ot Fitted. Office on south side 49-tf over Times Office DR -E. N. CHASTAIN Butler, Mo Residence High Street Office Phone 213 Res. Phone 195 | OR. 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 DR. J. T. HULL Dentist Entrance same that leads to R. L. Liddil’s Studio North side square Butler, Missouri OR. H. mM, CANNON DENTIST Butler, Missouri East Side of the Square Phone No. 312 T. C. BOULWARE Ph. gr & Surgeon Side Square, bee | Peoples Feed Yard Insist on getting what you ask for. The Officers and Directors OF The Missouri State Bank AND The Walton Trust Co. Cordially invite their customers and friends to come in and inspect their new quarters. They will be extended Every Courtesy. IT IS NO SECRET! It is plain to be seen why the PEOPLES BANK CONTINUES TO GROW 1st—Its officers are men who have been tried long in positions of trust. They have prov- en themselves to be conservative and economical. 2nd—It has a board of directors composed of seventeen successful farmers and business men, 3rd—It prohibits the loaning of its funds to its officers and employees. 4th—It has for the convenience of its friends and patrons a daily live stock market re- port. 5th—It gives to its patrons without cost the protection afforded by one of the latest burglar proof safes. 6th—It always has ample funds to loan to de- serving borrowers. 7th—It is (in fact) “A Bank on which you can Always Bank.” HESS DRUG STORE The Rexall Store The Chi-Nam-E] Store The Eastman Kodak Store The Lowney’s Candy Store The Lee’s Incubator and Stock Remedy Store The Prescription Drug Store BEE wie lard CORNER SQUARE. ) without

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