The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, April 14, 1910, Page 8

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—— A AEN CAD! A A te ; Trane Carnegie Fund Denounced. | Non-Breakable Fronts issued a formal statement, in h he discusses the withdrawal of Syracuse University from the bene- | fits of the Carnegie Foundation, and | scathingly denounced Doctor Pritch- ett. Doctor Day says, in part. i “When the Carnegie Foundation | was established I presented the claims | of Syracuse University for favorable consideration and received the condi- |tions required. I replied that we met all of those conditions in our jcharter and management. But it was not enough. We were understood to | be a Methodist university. We must not be published in the Methodist | Year Book. We must renounce our |loyalty anddeny the name of our |founders. We must betray the saint- |ly men and women who gave heroi- cally in the time of our weakness and sometimes extreme peril before other | friends knew us. “Tt was in the face of these narrow and intolerant exactions that I repli- ed, our loyalty was not for sale at any price, that there was not money jenough in any man’s hands to buy from us such an abject and craven attitude. Is there anything more {narrow and contemptible than the jadministration of the Carnegie Pen- sion Fund on these terms prescribed by Doctor Pritchett? “Other colleges may do as they please. If they wish to crawl in the dirt for such a price that is their privilege. But no university can teach young people lofty ideas of manhood and forget its self-respect jand honor or its loyalty and faith for |money that Juda& flung away when wl "THE non-breakable fronts alone should win you to Clothcraft Clothes. Think of your satisfaction in having a suit with the front, lapels, collar and shoulders holding their oN shape to the end. Yet Clothcraft cost you no more than the common run of clothes. The makersuse anon-shrinkable, damp-proof material instead of com- mon canvas is. the coat fronts, This prevents, absolutely, any tendency of the tronts to break or sag. You can be sure that Clothcraft Clothes are of pure wool and have lasting style. You get a signed guar- antee with each suit, CLOTHCRAFT All-Wool Clothes $10 to$25 American Clothing House One Price Clothiers jin remorse he went out and hanged h | jhimself, It is an insult for such a proposition to be made to a Christian institution. The Carnegie Founda- | tion is impossible to self-respecting | universities and colleges.” Second District Warrensburg, Mo. The Summer School begins May 31st, and contin- ues ten weeks. Courses in all subjects required for county or state examinations—special opportunities in common school subjects Regular courses offered for the Regents’ Certif- icates and the Normal Diploma. Students present the full time, may be accredited with three subjects for either County or State Certif- icate without examination. Teachers’ Courses in Drawing, Music, Manual Training, Domestic Science, Commerce subjects, Kin- dergarten and Primary Teaching. {48 students attended last summer. will be larger this summer. Recomendation committee assists students in se- curing positions. Send for Bulletin. Address THE REGISTRAR, Warrensburg, Mo. Beware of Ointments For Catarrh that Contain Mercury, as mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely de- range the whole system when enter- ing it through the mucuous surfaces. Such articles should never be used except on prescriptions from reput- able physicians, as the damage they will do is ten fold to the good you can possibly derive from them, Hall’s Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0., contains no mercury, and is taken internally, | acting directly upon the blood and} mucous surfaces of the system. In| buying Hall’s Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine. Itis taken in- ternally and made_ in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free. Sold by all Druggists, 75c. Take Hall’s Family Pills for consti- pation, Attendance | 2oe2t # Butler Produce Co. (WE KEEP THE PRICES UP) Wants your Eggs, Chickens, Butter | And will pay you the highest market price. Look out for your own interest and give us a chance at your business. We have made the farmers of this section thousands of dollars the last year by holding the | prices up. NEXT BUILDING WEST OF VANTREES'’ BLACKSMITH SHOP ~« __NAT WHIPPLE, Manager NEW USE FOR POOR FARMS. | would see a nickel or a dime, but people seldom used them. The cheap- est you could buy anything was ata A REMEDY FOR HIGH PRICES. | os | Nicholas Carter Outclassed and |{"ter. Cigars were a quarter Senator Lodge Introduces a Bill | \apiece, and all the way up to $l. A Making One Year Cold Storage | Gabriel Napping. small glass of beer cost a quarter, the Maxmum--A Question of | Manhattan, Kan., April.—Prosper-|2%d whisky went at $1 a drink. Public Health Also Involved, | ity has become so general in Kansas | Newspapers were sold at two bits He Savs. that the poorhouses have been aban- | #P!ece, so were oranges, apples and itd |doned as charitable institutions and *l! kinds of fruit that sell around here Washington, April.—A limit of one | converted into experiment stations to by the dozen,” year should be put on the use of cold |add to the wealth of the farmers. \- storage for the purpose of maintain- | Last year many of the farms were ing or advancing prices artificially. Bu. to individuals or were tilled b This is the Judgment of the Senate the superintendents and paid por d cost of living committee, and Chair- ants. When the state legislature | man Lodge introduced in the Senate | learned that the farms were not ful- a bill to meet the recommendations. filling their original purpose a bill In presenting the bill Senator Lodge | was enacted allowing the state agri-| ig fie Heuslullon ah iha Ban cultural college to take over the land } er e res ep pen- . 2, e, ‘ ate the committee to inquire Wet wages and prices of commodities was | The experiment. stations on 15h: given authority to make recommenda- | place, in a measure, the bulletins jac tions. In pursuance of that authority tae by the college: Gomi te raised | the committee now desires to recom- ae Pie caak 4 mend to the Senate legislation limit- he <n cae pn ing the time perishable food may be joadsides where the farmers aaa held in cold Storage, : help see it as they drive to town. P. | A Question of Hygiene, Also, E. Crabtree and G. C. Wheeler, pro- | fessors at the college, spend their) time after March 1 traveling over the | These fine young jacks will make state, directing their employees who | the season of 1910 at my barn, 8 miles have charge of the work at the sta- | due east of Butler and 3 1-2 miles tions. gg! —, a ‘ on +nvit.}. Brigham and Roosevelt a Every month the farmers are invit- | inethere sired by Game BB | ed to attend meetings at the prosper- | old Becky, sired by Charley Leon- ity farms and inspect the progress of |ard’s imported jack; dam a Black the crops. These gatherings have | Knight jennet, owned by Al. Hall, of developed into social affairs. The eee es > Paes is = The teuaatinadl ie anhinn a i years old, ands high. _Rooseve . : + lege proba- are black with white points. not completed, but it has proceeded | bly will send domestic science lectur-, TERMS: Brigham $12.50, Roose- far enough to confirm by the results | ers to speak at the meetings. |Velt $12.00, to insure colt to stand thus far obtained the view taken by ‘and suck. Money due when colt is the committee. | foaled, or mare sold, traded or about “The question of the public health Brigham and Roosevelt “From such ‘investigation as the committee has thus far been able to make, it is satisfied that some limit ought to be put on the use of cold storage for the purpose of maintain- ing or advance prices artificially. It is of the opinion that this limit of time will tend to an equalization of prices, and in some cases to a reduc- tion. | Drinks Come High in Alaska. Name Your Farms. Every man who owns a county home should name it. His farm is his place of business his crops, his horses, cattle and tools are his goods —his stock in trade—just as much as the goods of the merchants in town and quite often yield much great prof- it notwithstanding prevalent notions to the contrary. If he is right sort of farmer, he takes a just pride in ev- erything he raises and sells, be- cause it comes from his own prem- ises and is a part of himself \being the fruition of his own plans his own physical and mental energies. Like- wise the better the quality of his goods and-the more abundant the quantity the more cause on his part for the right sort of self esteem. If his crops are better quality than the ro a eR te at average very naturally, he wants the buyer and consumer to know where the good stuff comes from so what better way than to have his farm properly named and _ his products as- sociated with that name. The time is coming when all country roads will be turnpikes that one can haul loads over at all seasons of the year. Possi- bly not gravel or crushed rock turn- pikes but at least dirt roads so drain- ed and graded and dragged that rains will not materially affect them. In like manner the time is coming when most farms will have an appro- priate registered name and be known the county over by that name. So name your farm and make it best in your neighborhood in point of pro- ductiveness and the most attractive to the eye of the traveler who passes along your way. A. R. STINSON. Bobby Fountain’s Famous Dog and Pony Shows Will exhibit at Butler, Monday, April 18th RAIN OR SHINE The Show for the Tots and All Others SEE The Marvelous Aeroplane Feature Acts that are really New to the Public. 2 Performances Daily 2 2:30 and 8:00 p. m. Street Parade 10:00 a. m. Show Ground after parade. Prices reduced for this day and date to- Children 25c Adults 35c is not within the jurisdiction of your) Washington, April 11.—Drinks be committee, but it has no doubt, how- ever, that a limitation on storage would be hygienically of very great value and would tend to check many Eugene N. Foss Takes Oath. Washington, April 11.—Eugene N. Foss, the new Democratic member of the House from Massachusetts, who told about the price of drinks in to leave neighborhood. Colt to stand ‘ood for service money. Care will taken to prevent accidents, but come high in Alaska. John G. Brand, | will not be responsible should any who has mining interests near Nome, | CCU. is in Washington. At the Capitol he | CHARLE Percheron stallion, sev- en years old, will stand overcame a Republican majority of 14,000, because the voters of the dis- office Friday. | As he marched down the main aisle to the Speaker’s desk, escorted by | his brother, Representative George | E. Foss of Illinois, a Republican, the Democrats arose in a body and gave him an ovation. In one of the galleries was their mother, and sitting with her were the wives of the brothers. MILD LIQUID CURES ECZEMA Skin Sufferers! Drop Greasy Salves and Nasty Medicines. That mild, soothing liquid, D. D. D. Prescription, stops the awful itch with the first drops. A prescription of acknowledged value. Geta trial bottle at 25c. It will take away the itch right away and you will sleep soundly. We assure you personally of the merits of this remedy; for we KNOW. F. T. Clay, Butler, Mo. See a Democratic Landslide. Jefferson City, April—A dozen Democratic editors from the Eighth Congressional District met here to talk over the situation in the district and to predict a Democratic landslide in the state next November. An or- ganization was perfected by the elec- tion of E, W. Stephens, of Columbia, chairman, and J. B. Wolfe, of Califor- nia, secretary. The Democratic state officials and the clerks under them Free Exhibitions om|ttended the meeting and several of} Mr. Hale agreed with Mr. Bacon’s the officials made short talks. The visitors were given a banquet at the|committee, but at the same time he Madison Hotel, when there was more | said he realized it would be impossi- talk and still greater . promises of | ble to prevent the use of the material in the campaign. Democratic victory next fall. | physical troubles which are believed Nome. \to be attributable to the practice of} “A quarter was the smallest piece | trict were dissatisfied with the Payne- | keeping meats, particularly, in stor- of money used in Alaska all the time | Occasionally one | 9.2m Aldrich tariff act, took the oath of | age for a very long time.’’ at same stable. Price $10. Condi- tions same as for jack. Dewitt McDaniel He said: he was there. To Go Into Prices and Wages. The committee also asked the Sen- ate for instructions in the matter of continuing the investigation into the | cost of living. It was eStimated that | four months would be required to complete the work and that it would | necessitate an expenditure of $65,000. | The outline of the suggested plan was in great detail. It calls for state- | ments to be obtained from forty buy- | ers in selected localities covering prices paid to producers of foodstuffs | and live stock from 1900 to 1910, the wholesale and retail prices and wages and salaries and the cost of machin- ery entering into food production. With an Eye to Fall Elections, Senator Hale spoke in appreciation of the fact that there was a likelihood | of even a partial report at the present session. He turned then to the con- templation of the possibilities in con- nection with fall politics. “These questions will meet us at home,” he said, “and they will be agitated in connection with the con- gressional elections. “T trust” he added, “that we may count on the committee supplying us with much valuable material such as all of us may find desirable between now and next November.” Senator Bacon, of Georgia, depre- cated the suggestion of the Maine senator. He had not supposed the information was to be elicited merely for the purpose of supplying election material. == THIS Is == Bargain Week at our store on Extension Tables We are showing 22 styles. Solid oak, Many of them quarter sawed and pol- ished. In price from $5 to $25 If you need a table, even for harvest time, now is the time to buy. A. HL Culver high estimate of the purposes of the

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