The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, March 7, 1912, Page 2

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A FRIEND OF The Man who Drives the Plow We safeguard his funds, the ‘‘tight’’ places fn the year’s work, keep him posted as to the live stock market, care for his valuable papers without Gordon Announces His Candi- dacy for Second Term as | State Auditor. i | Jefferson City, Mo., Feb. 28.—| |State Auditor John P. Gordon has | | announced his candidacy for re-elec- | tion. | Mr. Gordon was born near Corder, ‘in Lafayette, county, Mo., April 29, : 1866, and was educated in the public| ‘schools of Lafayette county and at! | Westminster College, Fulton. He! was Deputy County Clerk of Lafayette | | county for eight years and postmaster | of his native town under Président! | Cleveland. Mr. Gordon has been secretary of | |the Missouri Drummers’ Association, | ‘and for years was a member of the | | Board of Managers for the Missouri | School for the Deaf at Fulton. He is’ }a son of Maj. George P. Gordon of | Lafayette county, who served with} ,Gen Joe Shelby in the Confederate | , Army, and a nephew of Col. Frank | lend him money to tide over charge, give him a place to engage in private conversation Gordon of “Gordon’s Regiment.” | or write letters, furnish his children with savings banks free | He was married in. 1885 at Las 1 of charge and pay interest on their savings deposits. Vegas, N. M., to Miss Oma Stoneorad. | To the farmer we offer all the facilities of ‘The Bank 'They have three children. In 1908 | on Which You Can Always Bank."’ Are we not entitled to he was nominated for Auditor on the , at least a part of his business? | Democratic ticket and was elected. Hi Mr. Gordon has become known for |} the care with which he examines | United States Depository |vouchers before drawing warrants }j upon the treasury. Concerning his | | present candidacy he says: Bond for Supreme Bench. Jefferson City, Mo., Feb. 28.— Judge Henry W. Bond, Supreme Court Commissioner today filed with tion of his candidacy for the Demo- Supreme Court. Judge Bond was born at Browns- ville, Tenn., January 27, 1848, where s he was admitted to the bar. He was graduated from Harvard. Judge “ Bond was « member of the Missouri Legislature in 1885, and in 1892 was elected Judge of the St. Louis Court of Appeals. His opinions while ¢ seen. member of that court are found in, z : the forty-odd volumes between the MM fifty-third and eighty-ninth volumes k a of the Missouri Appeal Reports. His opinions as a member of that court, as well as those written for the Mis- souri Supreme Court during his in- cumbency, are pronounced by the bar to be models of clearness, brevity the Secretary of State official notifica- | cratic nomination for Judge of the, “Tn announcing myself as a candi- and judicial learning. date for re-election I ask the support | Judge Bond was married Novem-| 0 the people upon my official record. | ber 18, 1880, to Miss Mary B. Miller |! have endeavored to’ conduct the/| ehpolivag tenn ‘business of the state with the same} ;care and strict attention that I do my | own private affairs. It has been my | purpose to protect the taxpayers and | Jefferson City, Feb. 29.—The suit to personally inspect every account | of E. C. Vandegrift, receiver of the ' against the state, and I have refused to | Can’t Recover from Masons. ler, Mo., against the Masonic Home jaw. \ of Missouri, was decided in favor of; “J have always favored and shall, the Home recently. Receiver Vande- | gontinue to favor low taxes) and con- grift sued for $17,522, basing it on tend that with economy in public af-, the fact that F. W. Tygard, president fairs the state has ample revenue to! of the bank, and for many years afford first-class public service. If treasurer of the Home, and alleging re-elected I promise that same fidelity that Tygard had used that amount of | to the interests of all the people of, money belonging to the bank, to! Missouri.’’ | square his account with the Home, | a Commissioner Bond, who wrote the! OVERTAXED opinion adopted by the court, holds’ i that there is nothing to prove the al- | Hundreds of Butler Readers Kaw legation, and that the evidence shows | What it Means. i that Tygard’s accounts with the home were correct. | | | The kidneys are overtaxed. 1 | Have too much to do. our prices are right. Manure Spreaders, etc. etc. | | Early symptoms of kidney illse if | . | Urinary troubles. | Bright’s disease follow. | A Butler citizen tells here a reliable Just received a tar of fancy Minnesota Seed potatoes, also car of eating potatoes, and ache and kidney complaint. There } Clay’s Drug S d th 7 | Poultry Shells ferns. eae Farm Implements | | Wwe are headquarters for the King Corn Silos, _ || the hoof, but solely on his record and want your business. Field and Poultry Fence || candidates for the various offices We have a large stock of the American | A ; Field and Poultry Fence, also a large stock of mare We aware see nae te bea ou the Electric Weld poultry fence. Also the b Haish and Cyclone Lawn Fences, and a full stock of all kinds of Steel Gates, Barb Wire, Our stock of Groceries, Hardware, Queens- ware, Wire, Nails, Hoes, Rakes, Garden and Field Seeds, etc., is the largest in Bates county. | We want your business and will make prices to get it. Thanking you for past trade and soliciting a continuance of same, we are Yours truly, Bennett-Wheeler Mer. Co TELEPHONE 82 HO WAN THD RSES I buy more market horses direct from the farmers than any man in the world. SHOW ME YOUR GOOD DRAFT HORSES. Hume, Thursday, March 7 Rich Hill, Friday, March 8 ‘Butler, Bring in your Good Horses, I buy them from | Saturday, March 9 GUYTON’S BARN 4 to 30 years old, from 800 to 1800 Ibs. I buy the best that grow and pay the highest cash price. I will fefunct Bates National Bank of But- pay only such as are authorized by|! give more for good horses than anybody. Show me your good draft horses and chunks. Will buy branded or unbranded. Mules 4 to 8 Years Old--Must be Fat I ALSO BUY GOOD FAT OLD PLUGS Don’t Forget the Date as I Come to Buy eer wee: S. Lowenstein) | ——— They tell about it in many aches and pains. FA Backache, weariness, headache. i} remedy for kidney ills. T | Mrs. Mahala Wainwright, 209 Ful- ton St., Butler, Mo., says: ‘Two years ago I had an attack of back- were dull pains across my back and I had dizzy spells. Hearing of Doan’s | Kidney Pills, I procured a supply at cou! not been the least recurrence of my i | We expect a car of crushed poultry shells '| | trouble.” the in a few days and our prices will be aslow as ||| __ For sale by all dealers. Price 50 | . the lowest. If needing any Poultry Food, Corn jcents. Foster-Milburn Co, Buffalo Chops, Chicken Feed, etc., don’t fail to see us. nee York, sole agents for the United | States. Remember the name—Doan’s—and Treasurer. Those enrolled as mem- \ take no other. 19-2t Gordon in the Field. We have just received a Jarge stock of | State Auditor Gordon announces | John Deere Plows, Cultivators, Corn Planters, | himself as a candidate for re-election. | L. | Disc Harrows, Gang and Sulky Plows, Tongue He bases his appeal to the voters Trucks, Smoothing Harrows, Farm Trukcs, of Missouri, not upon his views of the And don’t forget that | recall of Judges or the tariff on mules ing tax asa public servant during the last ||| four years. The spring days are just ahead and as violets besprinkle hillside and dell within the gift of a free people will emerge in like manner. It is good to with. Auditor Gordon has been an effec- tive official, and those who would contend with him at the polls next November must needs bee men of character and ability.—Republic, Feb- ruary 29, 1912. F _ The Men Who Succeed as heads of large enterprises are men of great energy. Success, to-day, demands health. To ail is to fail. It’s \utter folly for a man to endure a when Electric Bitte our burns, boils, scalds, sores, skin | eruptions, cuts, sprains or bruises. | Uarvaled for piles, corns or cold-| sores. Only 25 cents at F. T. Clay’s. | Winners! Winners! Winners! White Wyandottes eggs from our) first and third pen, winners at the! Missouri State show, $1.00 per set- | ting of 15. From our state cup win-! ners, for best male and female at! state show, $3.50 for 15. Special | prices on incubator lots. 19-4¢. | weak, run-down, half alive condition | Phone 232. Z “Liv” Moree Assures Taft. RMERS AND BUSI- NESS MEN ORGANIZE “In giving out estimate, the Third | crowd even attempted a contest. Missouri District should not be put’ They will have to do something more AGAINST SINGLE TAX. 40Wn as contested. Itis Taft’s. There than they have yet done to be even ‘Land Owners Protective Association’’ Formed at Butler Saturday. ) he farmers and business men of - ¥ Bates county will make an organized fight against the proposed constitu- 9 tional amendment to adopt the ‘‘single tax’’ system in Missouri, which will ' be submitted to voters at the general election this fall. A meeting was called in the circuit rt rooms Saturday afternoon for purpose of perfecting an organi- zation to make a united fight against single tax and the Land Owners’ Protective Association was formed. The following gentlemen were elected | officers: B. P. Powell, President; M, C. Wilcox, Secretary; J. M. Christy, bers of the Association were: C. E. | Robbins, L. L. Wix, M. M. Carroll, | Geo. W. Lee, W. S. Fuller, J. T.. Hyatt, P. A. Wright, L. P. Simpson, | C. Culbertson, M. S. White, E. Stroeber, C. H. Argenbright, Levi, Covey, A. M. Wallace. Hon. Geo. Falloon, of Kansas City, was present and addressed the meet- outlining the effects of the single ' system. What We Never Forget according to science, are the things associated with our early home life, | such as Bucklen’s Arnica Salve, that! mother or dmother used to cure | years of cures prove its merit. | Gentry Walton, Butler, Mo. is no evidence that the Roosevet dignified as contestants.’ Read About These Three Girls. How Sick They Were and How Their Health Was Restored by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Appleton, Wis.—“I take’ pleasure in writing you 4 an account of my sickness. I told a friend-of mine f how I felt and she said I had female trouble and advised me to use Lydie 2. Pinkham’s Vegetable | Compound, as she had taken it herself for the same erful results. I had been ier 4 | for two years and overworked myself, and had suc 1 bad feelin every month that I od hardly walk ‘or pain. I was very nervous and easily tired out and could not sleep nights. I had dizzy s: ls, and imples came on my face. But I have taken your ydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and it has restored my health. 1 think it is the best medicine in existence.”— Miss Czcit1a M. Bauer, 1161 Lawrence St., Appleton, Wis. ei Fe gi TEACHER’S GRATITUDE: ; neva, Iowa.—“I have been teaching school for some d I bev. Ioan Py. bean 1 bom iJ ma too busy with ar work to roperly, ered great Ss bas Mies of alnervous breakdown. rnileiaearaccmung wro' you al my condition and took Lydia E. Pinkham’ Vegetable Compound and the Blood Purifier acaok secchignended. These remedies have done wonders for me and. T can highly and widely recommend them to every suffe: woman.” —| INNIB. Suave, R. F. D. No. 1, Geneva, iowa, c/o Sam Erickson. A COLORADO GIRL’S CASE: Montrose, Col.—“I was troubled very much with irregular periods. Sometimes two months would ela was weak and nervous, could eat, pecmaly: oon i" ree “T took both Lydia Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound 2:12 Blood urifier J rfal. I feel like another person. I think your remedies are the best on earth and cannot express my aa a fo peel ig what bp fate —_ tome. I nelp my an ane sia5e Us atloine ines.”—Miss MoCanpxzss, Montrose Col.” pariah: Is it not reasonable to suppose that a medicine that did so much for these girls will benefit any other girl who is suffering with the same troubles? ’ Does it not seem the aly sensible thing to give such a medicine at least a trial? You may be sure that it can do lots of proof that it will’ do ! WN \

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