The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, September 7, 1911, Page 7

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Warrensburg Pigeon Lofts 60 pair Homer or Carrier pigeons....... Ve atielen $1 per pair Red Carneaux...$4 to $15 per pair Horneaux...... $15 to $50 per pair Our stock is direct from the importers and all guaran- teed in every respect. The above offer on Homers will only be good until we sell one pen of sixty pair. REFERENCE-—Banks: Commer- cial, Citizens. e E.R. HOUT, Warrensburg, /MISSOURIN [ PACIFIC \ IRON} MOUNTAIN Pace Missouri Pacific Time Table BUTLER STATION. June 17, 1911 NORTH. No. 206 Kansas City Accommodation. 7 No, 208 St. Louis & K. C. Mail & Ex.1 No 210 Southwest Limite: Kansae City Stoc! Local Freight. SOUTH. No, 209 Southwest Limited...... No. 207 K. C. INTERSTATE. WEST. No. 688 Madison Local Freight. 6:30am. No 87 Madison Accommodation... 1:15 p.m BAST. h . No. 688 Butler Accommodation... 12:01 p. m. : No. 604 Butler Local Freight. . 3:50 p.m. Freight treins Nos. 693 and 604 carry passen- gere on Interstate Diviaion. alas carry passengers. All freight for forwarding must be at deyot notlater than eleven o’ciock a. m. or be held for following day’s torwarding. Freight for Interstate Division must be aélivered before No freight billed for this five o’clock p. m, train in morning. -E, G. VANDERVOORT, Agent, Visit ——— Pueblo Colorado Springs Denver THIS. SUMMER Much has been said and writ- ten about Colorado’s beauty, but no words or ah can ever make you realize fully its mag- nificence. You have to go there—see the grandeur of its mountains—feel the bracing cli- mate—enjoy yourself in pas- times characteristic of this American Switzerland; riding, driving along roads that run over the crest of lofty moun- tains—through forest covered valleys. Besides you have ten- nis, golf, baseball—any of the outdoor sports you’re used to athome. Bathing places, fam- ous for the medicinal quality of their waters—beautiful parks, in the shadow of the Rocky Mountains, where bands play, the latest ‘‘wrinkle’’ in amuse- ment features is found. The is the industrial side of . | October, 1911, and on or before the frat day of . | said cause, the same will be :aken as confessed | tion to be at least fifteen days before the first + | day of satd pext October, 1911, term of this No other freight WASHINGTON | LETTER. Specia! Washington Correspond- ent of The Times. By Clyde H, Tavenner. Washington, D. C.—Has Taft com- mitted suicide? Has he, in renewing his warfare on the insurgents, com- mitted a fatal political blunder, both for himself and the Republican party generally? These queries have aroused dis- cussions that are raging like a blizzard of words in political circles all over the United States. Still another question that is being | asked and re-asked, especially by Re- publicans, is: If the President does succeed in driving the progressives | out of the Republican party, where | will he drive them to? And the conclusion most generally | reached is that it is written on. the| cards that the next President is to be | a Democrat. It is practically ‘ agreed | that if a standpatter is nominated, the progressives will smash him; and if al progressive is nominated, the stand-| patters will sinash him. What makes the situation still more | hopeless for the Republicans is that | the 1912 campaign issue is to be the | tariff, the one subject on which the two factions can not get together. La Follette After Taft’s Scalp. Senator Robert M. La Follette will | give President Taft a hard race for the 1912 nomination. It is declared that the Wisconsin senator believes absolutely that he will win. | The progressive Republican or La Follette headquarters in Washington | is a bee-hive of industry. From this headquarters the progressives are be. | ing organized in every nook and corner in the country. It is possible ' to present today the substance of the} claims which the insurgents make. They declare they expect to control, well in advance of the Republican _|{national_ convention, the delegates from: Wisconsin, Minnesota, North Dakota, Oklahoma, California, Wash- ington, Kansas, Nebraska, South Dakota, Montana, Oregon, Iowa (in part). There will be big aggressive fights for Illinois, Indiana, Wyoming: and Nevada. : The southern states will be pressed to take up the anti-Taft fight, on the ground that Taft’s nomination will be equivalent to defeat, and that if the party hopes for continuance of the loaves and fishes of patronage of southern states, it must give its sup- port to the nomination of a man with a chance to win. A Kept Promise. | When the Democratic House of; Representatives convened Speaker Hying Mactiities machines wera’ barly of, nor was thought 5 8 Scott's Emulsio in summer. Now Scott’s Emalsion is as much a sum- mer as a winter remedy. ~ Science did it. All Dreesiets Order of Publication. STATE OF MISSOURI, { 4g Con ty of Bates. In the Circuit Court, October term, 1911, in vacation August 23, 111, Mary L. Sayre and Earl Sayre, Plaintiffe ve, Edith Sayre, Defendant. Now at this day come the pla'ntiffe herein, by their atrorneys, ani file their petiti n, alleg- Ing. among other thinge that defe dant, Kdith Sayre, ie # n n-resident of tre State of Mis- souri. Whereupon, it is ordered by the Clerk in Vacatien, tbat eaid defendant be notified bv publication that plaintiffs bay commenced a suit against ber in this Court the object and gener] nature of which is toc biain a decree of of Partition and an Order of hele, subject to two trast deeds fully d scibed in the petiion filed herein, of the following des ‘ribed rea! €8 ate lying 8d situate in Bates County, Mis- sourl to-wit: ‘Vhe East half of Lote One and Two of the North es. Quarter and ‘he Wert hal’ of Lots One and 1 wo of the North Fast Quarter, all in Section Six, Township 39, of Range 2. And that the proceeds of raid sale, af er the pays ment of allo ets herei, made and exp nded, be divided among the parties tn interest, plan tiffa and defendant, according to their ree pect- ive righte and interests as found and d termin- ed by the Court, and that unless the said de- fendant, Ejith Sayre, be and appear at this Court, at the next term thereof to be begun and holden at the Court House in ‘he City of Butler, in aaid county, on‘he firat Monday of | | said Term, anewer 'r plead to the peition in | and judgment will be rendered accordingly And itis further ordered that acop- hereof be published, according to law, in ‘I HE RUTLER WEEKLY 11M k8, & Dewspaper published in said coun'y of Bates, for tour weeks -ucressively, published at least once a week, the last inser- Court. Es H. O. MAXEY, Circuit Clerk, A true copy of the record Witness wy hand and seal of the Cir- (seat) cult court of Baies county, this 28rd day of August, 1911. 44-4 H O MAXEY Circuit Clerk. Guardian’s Notice. Notice is hereby piven that on the 30th day of September, 1911, I will apply to the Probate Court of Bates County, Mise url, to resign my goardianebipof the p reon and estate of Fi ances Stepheneon, of unroand mind. 4 Cuartrs Cutver Guardian. Office Phone 3. Reaidence Phone 268, H. E. MULKEY, Registered Veterinary Surgeon BUTLER, MISSOURI Omee rate? R. Guyton’s Livery Barn. > ti DR. J. M. CHRISTY Diseas.s ot Women and Children a Specialty BUTLER ® MISSOURI .__|Champ Clark announced thata saving | Office Phone 20 House Phone 10} 4¢ 189,000 would be effected by the application of economical business ie DR. J. T. HULL methods in the running of the House. } Dentist The Republicans scoffed at the idea. Entrance same that leads to Stew- ard’s Studio. North side square DR. H. M. CANNON i DENTIST Butler, Missouri East Side of the Square Phone No. 312 They said it couldn’t be done. But . on the day of adjournment Chairman ial Fitzgerald of the Committee on Ap- propriations, announced that instead of the promised $182,000 having been saved, the amount was $228,000. ‘‘We do not believe that we crippled the House by abolishing a place in the House organization which had been held for years by a 16 year old girl wo T. CG. BOULWARE. $10 DOWN. neer, inside with wh: Full peating action, splen This instrument is guaranteed for ten years from the date of its manufacture, and is fur- nished in beautifully figured mahogany and fancy oak veneers. Height 4 feet, 8 We will credit railroad fare on out-of-town purchases. NO DEALERS SUPPLIED. Frazier-LoBello Music Co. overstrung scale, Five Carloads of Flburn Pianos Greatest Sacrifice Sale Ever Inaugurated in Kansas City $295 Style Elburn in this Sale only $175 $5 PER MONTH. DESCRIPTION This piano is double veneered inside and out; outside with fancy mahogany and oak ve- ite maple. Colonial in design. Pilaste ance; full empire top, drop mouldings, making the case very symmetrical and refined. 71-3 octaves, hardwood back, six posts, imported German tuning pins and wire; 13-lb. hammers; laminated pin block, compound key bottom, triple re- didly regulated. Ivorine keys and thre 1-2 inches. Width 5 feet, 4 1-2 inches. 1231 Grand Avenue - - Good until September 24 rs and trusses to match its appear- e nickle-plated pedals. Depth 2 feet, 3 1-2 inches. Kansas City, Mo. heims, and with having quietly co- operated with the food dopers in their campaign to drive Dr. Harvey W. Wiley out of public life. To this “‘in- defensible’ record should be added the president’s action in framing re- jected peace treaties with two nations with whom we are not in the slighest danger of ever going to war. Mail Clerks Persecuted. How are the railway mail clerks to ‘men who take the high-protection | ‘viewpoint, and whose chief agents’ and alleged “impartial investigators” ‘abroad are writing back articles for American newspapers ridiculing and/ belittling the crying demand of the consumers for the tariff revision! dawnward. Mr. Taft’s message against cheaper woolens will go down as a document of misrepresentation, false ‘pretense people. “The tendency to distrust big corporations,’’ said Mr. Perkins, “is hurting business. Business desires to go ahead unmolested.” The “‘let us alone’’ policy would suit the trusts exactly. Having gobbled every thing in sight, naturally they resent interference. With the tariff so high that they have a monopoly on all the necessities of life, and the anti-trust law so make effective their protest against and excuses. The real reason the interpreted that restraint of trade is having to work in wooden cars when they are forbidden by departmental gag rules to criticise their condition, or disclose it to the public, or even to petition congress for relief? This is a query that promises to perplex the railway mail clerks as long as Post- master General Hitchcock remains at the head‘of the service. There are 1,000 wooden mail cars inuse. They are run between heavy all-steel cars, or between a steel car inthe rear and the engine and tender in front. In the event of a collision or derailment the wooden mail car is invariably crushed like an egg shell. Yet Mr. Hitchcock, who is outdoing the “Father of all the Russians’’ in his imposition of a despotism and a reign of terror among the thousands of government employees over whom his word is law, says the railroad mail boys must make no protest. If they do not like their conditions, they know the state; works—smelters, etc. Visit Colorado this summer. Don’t hesitate for fear it will cost you TOO much, and when you go, travel via MISSOURI who never came to the Capitol,” de- clared Congressman A. Mitchell Palm- er of Pennsylvania in explaining the methods by which the $228,000 was saved. We do not believe we crip- pled the operations of the House by abolishing the positions of a couple of telegraph operators who had not Physician & Surgeon Office North Side Square, Butler, Mo. Diseases of women and chil- dren a specialty. B, F. JETER, Attorney at Law = Notary Public East Side Square Phone 186, what to do! What is the President’s defense for refusing to permit a reduction in the cost of living? Let us see: First, he makes the point the wool bill was unconsidered, when, as a matter of fact, the ways and means committee put in three months of investigation | and study before the bill was framed, which is twice the length of time given to the consideration of the woolen schedule of the Payne-Aldrich bill, and which document the President signed readily enough. Second, the President asks that the President vetoed the various tariff bills was not stated in any of his |messages. It was because he was under obligations to the beneficiaries of the Payne-Aldrich law to serve ‘their interests instead of the public interest. Mr. Taft was elected president, it should be remembered, with a campaign fund contributed’by special privilege. Then the great tariff trusts extended further aid (and placed Taft further in their debt) by frightening their employes into voting for Taft with the threat that their factories and mills would be closed unless he was elected. And, just as he was the candidate of special privilege, Mr. Taft is also a president of special privilege. ; Thus it is shown again how ‘protection makes politics a business proposition. The trusts contribute campaign funds to the party of the high protection wall with the intention That is his ultimatum. of not—only—recovering from the ' public in excessive prices the amount of their campaign fund investments, but with the determination of extorting stupendous dividends as profits. Mr. |Taft proved an exceptionally good investment for the tariff trusts. “Let Us Alone.”’ The trust officials who appeared before the various investigating committees of Congress this summer, including G. W. Perkins, complained ‘because the Democrats were too lactive in inquiring into their business methods. ‘‘Let us alone’’ is their restraint so long—as : it is they are safe from and) immune from Hence, their desire to not “reasonable, ”’ competition, prosecution. be let alone. In the meantime, how about prices? Ten years ago a pair of five-pound woolen blankets could be bought for $4.75; to-day they cost $5. At that time the price of five yards of serge -cloth, fifty inches wide, was $3.75; the price now is $6.25. Ten years ago twenty yards of unbleached cotton cloth could be bought for $1.20; to.day the cost is $2.20. Five yards of all wool flannel could be purchased then for $2.75; the price now is $6.25. Flour sold for $3.50 less per barrel during the civil war than it does now. “The Richest Baby." Judson C. Welliver, of the very few Washington newspaper and magazine writers who write what one they think, hasan article in Hampton’s magazine this month which is of especial interest, now that President Taft has vetoed the cotton bill. This article is an account of how the cotton - millionaires keep up their fat dividends—amounting to one hundred per cent. in some instances annually —and at the same time continue to plead for high tariff, without which they contend they will starve to death. Mr. Welliver begins his article with a photograph of one James Nicholas Brown, age eleven, whose wealth is estimated in the hundreds BUTLER, MISSOURI ____.|put their hands to an instrument in eS | years. We do not believe we crip- p AG | F [ pled this house by abolishing about 20 : policemen who never could be’ found “ : around the capitol or by abolishing aa ee ee places supposed to be held by men in 1g this building and carried on the pay- i ‘ i rolls, drawing $900 to $1,000 a year, oh Mg sasinitianad who were working at the same time Ask for information regard- in real estate offices in the city of ing rates—the best time to go— A little Washington. We have simply made the operation of this House honest.” Taft’s Record ‘‘Indefensible.’’ Nearly three-fourths of Mr. Taft's term of office has passed into history. He has had sufficient time to have made progress on lines along which he promised to proceed when he was a, candidate for the high office he holds. He made his campaign on a tariff revision downward issue, and | today the country is in the grip of a higher tariff tax than ever before in its history, in spite of the fact that the president has had two separate and distinct opportunities to keep his word. In his three years of office President Taft can be credited with having kept Ballinger in office until the country was nauseated; to have almost succeeded in his attempt to give Alaska away to the Guggen- and what it will cost. We are thoroughly posted on these mat- ters and will be glad to advise you. “CLENO” used now will prove that ‘‘A stitch in time saves ten’”’ if you will use Cleno with your young towls. It will surely rid them of mites and lice and cause them to become healthy broilers, layers and eventual- ly money in your pocket. - a 4 / MISSOUR! \ PACIFIC IRON What you Buy we Stand by OLAY’S Prescription Drug Store NORTH SIDE SQUARE. E. C. Vandervoort, Agt Butier, Mo. Frank P. Prosser, D.P.A ——— oplin, Me. z people continue to pay exhorbitant favorite wail whenever a move is prices for woolens until he hears from made to determine in what manner his tariff board, which is packed with they are exacting tribute from the No Man is Stronger Than His Stomach A strong man is strong all over. No man can be ¢@ strong who is suffering from weak stomach with its consequent indigestion, or from some other disease of the stomach and its associated organs, which im- pairs digestion and nutrition. For when the stomach is weak or diseased there is a loss of the nutrition contained in food, which is the source of all physical strength. When a man ‘‘ doesn’t feel just right,” when he doesn’t sleep well, has an uncomfortable feeling in the stomach after eating, is languid, nervous, irritable and despond- ent, he is losing the nutrition needed to make strength. Such a man should use Dr. Plerce’s Golden Medical Discovery. It cures diseases of the stomach and ether organs of digestion and nutrition. It enriches the bleed, javigorates the liver, strengthens the kidneys, nourishes the nerves, and so GIVES HEALTH AND STRENGTH TO THE WHOLE BODY. You can’t afford to accept a secret nostrum as a substitute for this noa- alcoholic medicine OF KNOWN COMPOSITION, not even though the urgent dealer may thereby make a little bigger profit. Ingredients printed on wrapper. a A eh i A a SS Tin UTE TET SET EEE of billions, every cent of which was ;made out of the highly-protected ‘New England cotton manufacturing industry. ‘‘In 1908, the panic year,” , Mr. Welliver writes, ‘‘the cotton trust jcalmly paid its usual fat dividends. True, its already underpaid laber had to suffer sharp reductions; true, the ‘wearers of its products had to pay increased prices. But that was unimportant to the cotton millionaires. ‘They would have their dividends, and they got them. They had the power |to extort them. They could pay as ‘low wages and charge as high prices jas they chose. The tariff wall held them secure in their domination. Senator Lippitt predicts this country will be plunged into the worst sort of |a panic if the regular flow of profits |into the coffers of the richest baby of |the world is shut off. | Something new in post cards at Smiths’. 45-2t.

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