The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, May 8, 1913, Page 6

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The Official Tests show Br. Price’s Baking Powder to be most efficient in strength, of highest purity and healthfulness No Alum, No Phosphate of Lime HUSBAND NAILED | A FELD DAY FOR HOUSE ORATOR Many Political Speeches In Debate | On Tariff Schedule. AMENDMENTS ARE VOTED DOWN | ule in record time. The monotonous rolling chorus of Democratic noes swamped amendment after amend- ment as the schedule went through unchanged. The discussion opened with citrus | fruits, in the agricultural schedule, the Pacific coast growers waging an unsuccessful fight against cutting off the tariff on lemons, figs, raisins, dried grapes and other coast products. Efforts to increase the proposed duty on peanuts to give better protection to the Virginia industry also fell through. The schedule covering spirits, | wines and other beverages went through without dissent but consider- The House Has Now Reached the} Much Discussed Schedule K, the Wool Section—Debate Fea- tured by Personalities. Washington, May 3.—Tariff revision with an obligation of inspiring politi- cal oratory, carried the bout up to, the much-discussed schedule K, the} wool schedule, which will be disposed of without delay. When the house adjourned it had completed the agri-; cultural, wines and spirits, cotton and | flax, hemp and jute schedules. The, Democratic majority had rolled stead- ily on, nonch ntly voting down every one of do s of amendments » ented by the Republicans and| Progressives. It s a field day for orators on) both sides of the house, and the vet-| erans vied with the boy orators | among the new members in their elo- eutionary efforts. The iniquities of| the protective tariff theory were} ‘lashed in ringing periods by the Dem-| ocrats and the dire days of the panic} of 1893, with its soup houses and/ rui were described by the Repub-; 1 as the result of Democratic doc- | trine exemplified in the Wilson bill. | Line Drawn on Goat Poetry. | When the political past for twenty | years and the political future for aj century had been thoroughly threshed out of all oratorical material, and) Representatives Barnhart of Indiana, aud Moore of Pennsylvania had gotten to the point of reciting original poetry about gouts, Representative Under-| wood called a halt. The speaker insisted upon confining debate thereafter to the merits of the proposition under consideration and with the mercury in the house ther- mometers going up at a mid-summer gait, hurried through the flax sched- RUBBER ON GATES: Wife so Weak and Nervous Could Not Stand Least Noise — How Cured. Munford, Ala.—‘‘I was so weak and Nervous while passing through the r srg Change of Life that I could hardly live. My husband had to nail rubber on all the gates for I could not stand it to have a gate slam. “T also had back- ache and a ee able fight was made by the represen- tatives of textile districts when the coiton schedule was reached. Politics Features Debate. Many of the speeches really dealt with the paragraphs of the tariff un- der consideration, but general poli- tics and partisan personalities fea- tured the debate. Representative Thomas of Kentucky had a few things to say about the Republicans person- ally and the debate for a moment promised interesting developments, when Republican Leader Mann, stung by Mr. Thomas’ reference to him as the bewhiskered gentleman from IIli- nois, retorted that while it was true he was “bewhiskered,” at least he was not “bewhiskied.” Representative Thomas called the Progressive party a “patent medicine advertisement scheme,” and criticised Representative Payne of New York for reflacting on President Wilson be- cause the president went to New Jer- sey in connection with state legisla- tion, ACCUSED OF POISONING WHISKY Oklahoma Real Estate Men Held to Grand Jury for Giving Acid to Indian. Hugo, Ok., May 3.—E. L. Reed and V. Bronough, real estate dealers here, waived examination and were held to the grand jury on a charge of giving Klis Wood, a fullblood Choctaw, a bottle of whisky containing 20 per cent carbolic acid. The state and government officers interested in the prosecution vigorously opposed the move stating Wood would soon die and that they wanted his testimony placed in the records. The govern- ment alleges this case is the first of several in which Indians were killed _by poisoned whisky after they had been induced to deed their property to land sharks who promised them a monthly pension. Mr. Bryan Starts Back. Los Angeles, Cal., May 5.—Secre- tary of State William J. Bryan spent an hour and a half here on his way to Washington from Sacramento. He was met here by his son, William J. Bryan, Jr, his wife and their two children, who will accompany the Secretary of State as far as Tucson, Ariz., where they live. THE GENERAL MARKETS, Kaneas City, May 6, 1913, CATTLE—Steers $765 @ 875 Selected feede: 78 @ 8 2 HOGS—Bulk of sal 325 @ 8 35 SHEBP—Wethers 600 @ 7 00 Lambs . 800 @ 850 WHEAT—No, 2 hard.... 87%@ 89 No, 2 red..... 98 @ 102 CORN—No. 3 white 35%O" 36 3%@ 36 8 560. @13 08 760 @it 00 23. @ 8 @ 18 @ 16 BSs8eessus as ~ GALFORNI B Embassy Preparing Protest Again Alien Land Law. st NO HOPE OF AID FROM WILSON Ambassador Chinda Does Not Belleve That the President Will Be Able to Influence the Califor- nia Executive. Washington, May 6.—The Japanese embassy has been supplied by the state department with a copy of the Alien Land Owning bill passed by the California legislature and the am- bassador will employ the time. until Secretary Bryan's return in preparing a formal protest against the measure, embassy has no hope that any word President Wilson may send after Secretary Bryan re- turns will influence Governor Johnson to withhold his signature from the act, so the only object of the protest will be to acquaint the American peo- ple with the Japanese contention, and, if possible, to influence the executive branch of the government to endeavor to nullify the action of the California legislature, The embassy will make known the ground ‘of its protest in a diplomatic note to Secretary Bryan. It is well understood that to settle the question will require the action of the United States court. It will be for Secretary Bryan to determine whether the United States government itself shall’ become party to a suit of this charac- ter, in the capacity of an interventor. International lawyers hint that the ad- ministration is in an exceedingly del- icate position, for the reason that, while apparently a champion of the Japanese cause, through the secretary of state, before the California legisla- ture, probably from this point on it must defend the California law against Japan in the diplomatic struggle about to begin. If the department should adopt the California contention that the land law does not violate the existing treaty with Japan, then it might fecl bound to refuse to submit the issue to arbi- tration by The Hague tribunal, Fur- thermore, it is contended that the United States government probably would be unable to enforce the decree of the tribunal in case it should be adverse to California, if the American courts found that the state acted with- in its rights in enacting the law. No case has been found where the su- preme court has passad upon the rela- tive forces of a treaty which invaded the reserved constitutional powers of a sovereign state and of a conflicting law of such state. So the state de- partment probably will establish a Precedent in disposing of this issue. It has developed that as a result of the centering of attention upon the California situation a number of the diplomatic representatives in Wash- ington have been informally discuss- ig and conferring over alleged vio- lations of treaties by many states of the Union. Violations are said to have occurred particularly in connec- tion with cases involving the dispo- sition of property of aliens who have died intestate in this country and in which local state courts have taken jurisdiction in defiance of treaties. Altogether there are indications of a feeling of unrest that may lead to demands upon the national govern- ment which could not be complied with without a general rearrangement of the functions of the national and state governments, so far as they concern aliens. A KANSAS RIVER ON # RAMPAGE Houses on the Smoky Hill at Ellsworth Apparently - the Threatened by Flood—Livestock Out of Danger, Ellsworth, Kan., May 6.—Houses on the south side of the Smoky Hill river here are threatened by flood waters as a result of heavy rains and cloydbursts near here and further west. Families living in this district are packed up and ready to move. Stock- men have moved much of their stock to higher ground. The Frisco bridge and the wagon bridge across the Smoky Hill here are expected to go At no time or with no class mals are gains so cheaply made as with lambs while they are suckling their dams. A pound of gain is. ob- tained, with less than a pound of grain feed. A creep should be provided for the lambs early. This {s done ,by fencing off a corner of the pen—a dry, sunny place—fixed with several spaces through. which the lambs’ can enter, but small enough to keep the ewes out. A grain trough is put in the creep about six inches from the floor so the lambs can easily eat from it. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery Prevents these diseases, It makes a man’s insides clean ‘end healthy. It cleans the digestive organs, makes pure, clean blood, and clean, healthy flesh. ' : It restores tone to the neryous system, and cures nervous—exheustion and Prostration, It contains no alcohol or habit-forming drugs, she Constipation is the most unclean uncleagliness, Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pel- lets cure it.” They never gripe. Easy to take as c:nts. PROFESSIONAL CARDS — OR. 1 M. CHRISTY Diseascs ot Women and Children a Specialty STABBED HIMSELF ON A. TRAIN Man ‘Believed to Be H. G. Holley of St. Joseph Taken to Topeka Hospital. The young lambs will not be able to chew the hard corn, so cracked corn should be fed. Rolled or ground oats will give better results than whole oats, Equal parts of corn, oats and bran, by weight; or corn six parts, bran three parts and oilcake one part are good rations for young lambs. Topeka, Kan., May 5.—Declining to give his name, a man believed to be H. G. Holley of St. Joseph, Ma., is in Office Phone 20 BUTLER - MISSOURI House Phone 10 a local hospital suffering from a self: inflicted wound in ‘his throat. He Cracked corn alone wi!l give good re- sults with older lambs, but young: out at any time. Both bridges are impassable now. 3 Reports from Hays, west of here, show loss to farmers that will reach thousands of dollars. Livestock was drowned, crops covered {n mud or washed away. “~ stabbed himself on a Santa Fe train lambs need other food, such as bran haré just pefore'time for It to leave ‘DR. J. T. HULL Bnd Olea ter coat eu snOU Mla De rae en for St. Joseph. Letters were found Dentist in his clothing from Br. A. H. Holley! Entrance same that leads to Stew- St. Joseph, Mo., and letters addressed ard’s Studio. ~ to H. G. Holley. He denies Holley is his name and declines to reveal his ldentity. GOVERNMENT TO SEIZE CATTLE The Failure to Pay Grazing Fee in Eastern Oklahoma Forfeits 125,000 Head of Stock. North side square . Butler, Missouri DR. H. M. CANNON DENTIST Butler, Missouri East Side of the Square Phone No. 312 Fort Smith, Ark., May 5.—One hun- dred and twenty-five thousand head of cattle grazing in the forest reserve in the Choctaw Nation in eastern Office North Side Square, Butler, Oklahoma are to be seized by the/14 Diseases of women and chil- rf government for nonpayment of the dren a specialty. : : annual grazing tax of $1 per head. It ‘ became known when a large force of 7 : officers was dispatched to the field B, F. JETER, Attorney at Law = Notary Public to round up the stock. East Side Square Phone 186 BUTLER, MISSOURI DR. ROBERT E. CRABTREE General Practice. T. C, BOULWARE ‘ Started Right for Market Lambs Physician & Surgeon not to feed the lambs too much at one time. The leavings should be re moved from the trough each day. Lambs are dainty eaters and do not like stale feed that has been mussed over by others. ‘The feed taken from their trough may be given to the ewes. Trustee’s Sale. Whereas F.R Allen and Iva D. Allen, his wife, by thelr deed of trust dated November 26th, 1912, ard recorded. in the recorder’s office within and for Bates county, Miesouri, in Docking and Castrating. Two operations which should not be n+glected on the market lambs are docking and _ castrating. “Buck” | Book No. 237 at page three, conveyed to ‘the | Diseases of Children. lambs begin to teas the ewes and one Bute plened fnerand Wade Ntane ares another at about eight to ten weeks | county of Bates and state of Missonri, to-wit: TELEPHONES The east one-fourth (1-4) of Block sixty (60) ii in the town now city of Butler, Maou | Office 301 which conveyance was made in trust to secure the payment of one certain note fully described in said deed of trast; -and. whereas default has been made in the payment of seid note now past due and unpaid. Now, therefore, at the request of the legal holder of said no*e and pursuant to the condi- tions of aaid deed of trust, I will procead to Residence 541 Office in Gench Bldg. of age. Unless they are castrated one cannot hope for the best gains from the feed they consume. When put on the market entire, they sell for 25 cents to $1 below wether lambs. This is because they are thinner and have here T. J. HALSEY, M..D. 0. 0. Eye, Ear, Nose and { Throat Specialist ) developed masculine characters, mak- sell. the above described ‘premi ‘at public ing the meat of poorer quality than | vendue tothe highest bidder tor cash at the 3 ie ff -weth P ve le + Tae ig | West front door’ of the court house, in the and the fitting of Glasses BL Ct Wetbel: OMe We same: city of Butler, County of Bates and State of BUTLER, MO Missouri, on Friday, May 9th, 1013, between the hoarse of nine o’clock in the fore- noon and dv o’clock in the afternoon of that day for the purpose of satiefyi:g said debt in- terest and costs. Wf, ARNOLD, 26-td Trustee. very little more danger in casrating a lamb than a pig, yet no one thinks of feeding boar pigs for market. Docking or removing the tail is quite a simple operation. On the Tanges one man does the entire OP | Nowe e, . ation haa disposed of above | eration, the tail being cut off with a | property and his grantee is the party indefault, ; knife. But with most Missouri farm- 4 ers two men can do it better. The easiest way is to catch the lamb and hold it so that its tail can be chopped iat bl thas let fad off with a hatchet or ax. This is the | {stration upon she as : ert, easiest and quickest method, but not p esrpenow bey ye eee al Bates County the safest, for often lambs will die Bisel) Deena omen tn aes day of March, from bleeding, and in most cases more or less weakened from the loss of blood. There is also more danger. of infection, especially in warm | #3Y weather, Docking with a hot iron or chisel is much preferred. The irons are made similar to large pincers, with handles about 18 inches long. The end is heated to nearly red heat and the tail slowly. pinched off. If the. irons are too hot and the work done too rapidly the ends of the blood ves- sels will not be seared shut and bleed- ing will occur, so do not hurry the operation. It is advisable to put the lamb’s tail through a hole in an inch boatd to prevent burning the body. One man holds the left fore and hind legs with his left hand and the right legs with his right’ hand, the back of the lamb being held tightly against his chest. The other man uses the | Office over Peoples Bank Phone No, 45 Notice. Notice is hereby given, that Iattera of admin- avi 26-46 NORTH. it & Ex. ity Accommodation No, 202 EK. C, Mi No, 206 Ki it, does not car- No. bai No 210 No, 252 ry buildings destroyed andj @4

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