The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, July 29, 1915, Page 3

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That the Young men li it and old peo 30c—and you get'a ha 4ibs Good age sigh for and ol ’ There have been 2800 people in Bates county bought it and over. 11200.have tried it, and say it sure is good. : GOOD and it is the BEST COFFEE that wes e you get a seven piece set with one package. You can also get— 2s Dried) 3 cans | 3cansPork|3 packages| 3 cans 3 cans 1 can 2 ths fe Peaches Corn | and Beans| Spaghetti | Peaches | Salmon | Salmon Peanut 15c 25c 25c 25c 25c 25c 20c | Butter 26¢ 2tbs New 3.cans 3cans |3 packages Ripe 2 cans 1 can 1 quart Apricots | Tomatoes| (Kraut | Macaroni | Olives | Salmon | Salmon | Peanuts 25c 25c 25c 25c 35c 25c 5c 3 cans , 3cans' 1 can Galion Best Rice Peas Pumpkin Jello Salmon |. Peaches | Chocolate 25c 25c 25c 15c 25c Candy 20¢ Gosnell’s Grocery, Phone 77 children ery for. The middlé old’ people almost die for. ke it. Middle age people crave ple will not do without it? The name of it is EVER- “ST ¢ \ ver sold in Bates county for ndsome dish with every package and sometimes _ ALL THIS AND MORE AT — BEST MILK A. A. Seese Am Killing Quite a LA - Pork Steak.......... “ 5 i and theref i Boiling Beef......... 10c to 12% c per pound sey. policy and practice of the Gov-| abandonment of thee ‘principles | been using straw to secure a Beef Loaf.... ........... .....15¢ per pound “This is a remarkable three-| ernment ss idea niga w cM for which this government con- ane of ting peas Anat ; F instructor in dairy husbandry, ral com ; malar’ G 1s ake ie ely as ing Ss results. : THESE PRICES ARE CASH “and there is little doubt but} Illegal and inhuman acts, how- Seal Aennae ee a i Aer 10R Independent of all agricultural Le 2 ; what is is the best ever made in|ever justifiable they may be Ty i Nie Uni colleges: or experiment stations, Kill all our own Hogs and Cattle and they are the best that the state.” | thought to be, against an enemy States a one some wide-awake man in that can be bought. -The three years of butter pro-| who is believed to have acted in Government are contending for Community discovered that by duction were as follows: 90\)/contravention of law and hu- the same great object, have long spreading straw on his wheat GIVE ME A TRIAL pounds the first year, 827/manity, are manifestly indefen-| +454 together in urging the im the fall soon after sowing, pounds the second year, anid|sible when they deprive neutrals very principles, upon which the he could, the following Mareh, -South-east corner square. Butler, Mo. 777 pounds for the last year. of their acknowledged rights, Bovacnaent of Ela ‘United secure a stand of clover with- ; Carlotta Pontiac is 12 years! particularly when they violate|« area mit a —F old. She, was bred and raised/the right of life itself. They are both -ontendin; for all happened from the faet or on the University farm. “| If a belligerent cannot _retal- the Pemeacy of the ae The that i i Ls mlbad Pig a Tried to Kill Frank to Save Men; William Green today thus de- — ‘jate against an enemy without Government of the United States |°%°% bad- been sharpened — by in Prison, ' scribed to Governor Harris the| Coal Production in Missouri. ‘injuring the lives of neutrals as will continue to contend for that |YCt! °! close study of the big : apa motives for. attempting to 88-| ‘The coal mined in Missouri in| Well as their Property, humant-| freedom, from whatever quarter | 000% OF MATE; a8 seen’ between Milledgeville, Ga., July 23.—|sassinate Leo M. Frank last Sat- 1914 |ty as well as justice with due re-|." pwr ‘navica tle plow handles, had noticed ( ? amounted to 3,935,980 tons, | violated, without compromise lthat where there was straw ‘ “I attempted to kill Frank to) urday night. : ‘ -’;gard for neutral powers should y PRET ty tat Where there was straw pro Pp’ ; : . aa valued at the mines at $6,802,325. | 4 ‘ jg. [ANd at any cost. It invites tHe tocting the tl bran Senile protect innocent _ lives. The} Green denied any outside sug- Compared with 1913, when the | dictate that the practice be dis- practical cooperation of the Im. {°° ing the thin, worn soils on newspapers said mobs were go-| gestion or help. coal production of Missouri was |C0Btinued. If persisted .in it pernleGanin’ (Gevernment’ at the hillside the young clover ing to attack the prison and if} Accompanied by the governor, P “|wWould in such _ circumstances plants would hold their own this occurred I knew many wid-. ows and orphans would be the result, To prevent this, I decid- ed to remove Frank who. was the eause of all the trouble.’’. We make a ur ’Phone is No. 167 trimming. my Pork Chops, Pork Steak, Shoulders and Hams close — therefore am Overstocked with Sausage.............. MAY BE Holstein in University of Mis- souri Dairy Herd Has Re- markable 3-Year Record. What is believed to be the best three-year milk record ev- er ;made by a Missouri cow has just been completed by Carlot- ta Pontiac, a Holstein, owned by the dairy department of the University of Missouri. Carlotta Pontiac has made an average yearly -production . for these three years of 22,658 pounds of milk. During the last year she produced 21,743 pounds, and 24,514 pounds the first year. Her first year’s rec- ord is within a hundred pounds of the amount of milk given by the present holder of . the world’s record for butter pro- duction, a cow owned by a dairyman at Finderne, New Jer- Meat Market Lot of Hogs and am RD wees. 15 per pound ...... .10c per pound q| || satisfactory because it “COW IN MISSOURI proposes on U. 8, NOTE TO GERMANY. Washington Oritics Think It Ends ‘‘All Talking Back and Forth.'’ : Comment. by English and {| American newspapers on Presi- :dent Wilson’s latest note to Gex- many on the’ question of sub- ‘marine warfare is unanimous on jone point, that it is decidedly \firm and leaves no room for fur- | ther, parley over the ‘question o* jrespecting the rights‘ of neutrals | vo the high seas. | That the note: is virtually- av jultimatum and pretty clos to a threat implied, is the consensns of opinion in Washington diplo- |matie circles, which also are con- vineed it leaves no loophole for |‘‘further talking back and 'forth.’’ - " “Tt is in plain, unmistakable | language, and will not be rel- ‘ished in Berlin,’’ is the opinion |of the London Star, which voices |in substance, the opinion of the |entire British press. ‘The Illinois Staats Zeitung says Germany will never submit to the tone of it, and will find no other answer than the breaking off of diplomatic relations with the United States, The following are the _perti- nent extracts from the note: »The note of the Imperial Ger- ‘man Government dated the 8th of July, 1915, has received’ the careful consideration of-the Gov- ‘ernment of ‘the United States ‘and it regrets to ‘be obliged to \say that it has found it very un- 1 fails to ‘meet the real differences be- ;tween the two governments and indicates no way in which the accepted principles of law and humanity may be applied in the grave matter in controversy, but the contrary ar- /rangements for a partial suspen. sion of those principle whjch vir- tually set them aside. The Government of the Unit- ed States notes with satisfaction that the Imperial German Gov- ernment recognizes without res- ‘ervation the validity of the prin- ciples insisted in. the several ;communications which this gov- jernment has addressed to the \TImperial German Government |with regards to its announce- ment of war zone and the use of ‘submarines against merchant- men on the high seas, * * * * The Government of the United States is, however, keenly dis- appointed to find that the Im- perial German Government re- gards. itself as in large degree exempt from the obligation to observe these principles, even where neutral vessels -are con- cerned, by what it believes the 4,318,125 short tons, valued at $7,468,308, the returns for 1914, according to the United ee Geological Survey, show a de- crease of 382,145 tons in quanti- | ty and of $665,983 in value. The decreased production in | 1914; was due primarily to the uni-| formly mild weather throughout | the winter and to the lessened de-| mand from railroads. The de-' mand for steam coal by © manu-| ||facturers. was fairly. well. mair tained during the year, the tran: ‘portation facilities. were _ ample and satisfactory, and there was ittle interruption: to mining on account of labor troubles, There were occasional shutdowns but ho_prolonged periods of-idleness. 'the time lost being less than 3) per cent of the time made. * For-the 9,549 men~ employed. heb an average of 179 days, | the legislative probe committee today began a thorough inquiry into the Frank ‘attack.. : General prigon ‘conditions. are also to-be investigated. y specialty of \legality made by ‘the Imperial pleaded the right-of retaliation |in. defense of its acts:and in view ‘of the manifest ‘possibility of conforming to the ‘established |mules of naval warfare, the Gov- erriment of the’ United ‘States cannot believe that the. Imperial Government’ will longer’ refrain constitute an unpardonable ot- fense against the sovereignty of the neutral nation affected. * * * The rights of neutrals in time of war are based ‘upon, principle, not upon expediency, ‘and the principles are immutable. , It is the duty and obligation .of bel- ligerents to find a way to adapt the new circunistances to them. * In view of the admission of il- ferman Government’ when it t disavowing the wanton act naval commander in ‘sink- the Lmsitania or from: offer- ican Pande this time when co-qperation may accomplish most and this great clay spots where there was no common subject be most strik- straw or trash” the young ingly and effectively achieved. : (plants would never grow.’ This ue which this Government upon the friendship between the people and government of the, German nation impels it to - press'~ very solemnly upon the: Impérial. Ger. man Government the for a scrupulous observance of neutral rights in this critical matter." >< prompts # to say to: the Imperial German‘ Government that repeti- German~1iaval- vessels of contravention. of tho: must be regarded by the ernment of the United . States, when they ‘affect American cit- izens as deliberately un {ion are represented. in the sum: oak bows eager - Unit.| University of , Missouri :at / students from For You at Norfleet & Reams. Ad. and Jot Down Wha “You Want. : Gallon Nectar Syrup...,........ Galion K. C. Brand Syrup.. Galion Pallace Brand Syrup.. Gallon Congress White Syrup Gallon Apples, Gallon Pie Peaches. Read this Can Apples... Can Pumpkin.. Gallon Peeled Peaches....35c Can Baked Beans...3 for 25c Gallon Cherries, Pitted....85c Can Appie Rutter..:.10c each Gallon Red Raspberries...60c Can Sweet Potatoes.2 for 25c Gallon Blackberries..,....50c Post Toasties. 2 for 25c Gallon Apricots... -45c No, 2 Oats.... 3 for 25c , Gallon Tomatoes. Can Tomatoes. : Can Hominy. Can Kraut ..3 tor 25c +... 2 tor 25c Cream of Wheat. Pufted Corn.........2 lor 25c Shreaded Wheat 2 tor 25c Wizard Triangular Mops regular $1.50 only 25c Including bottle polish. HARDWARE Double Harpoon Hay Forks only $1, Hay Forks from 60cto .75c Axes, Shovels, Scoops, Rakes, Hoes, Handles of all kinds. Hard- ware of all kinds. Get our prices before you buy. FRUIT Oranges, Bananas, Lemons, finest you ever saw. FORD BUYERS GETTING $60.00 EACH The Ford Motor Company of Detroit is now making final Preparations for the distribution of something like 15 million dollars to people who have bought Ford cars during the past year. There will be 300,000 checks of $50 each, and they will be mailed to people in all parts of the world. Thirty - stenographers._are_now-at-work—on -this—great—task,— which will be finished about uguat 16. Only the orainial buyers of this year’s product of the Fo Company will share in this distribution. A great many of these. checks will come to Bates county, as the result of the work eons by the local agents of the Ford Company, Norfleet & eam. Yours, Norfleet é Ream The Only Independent Grocery, Bakery and Hardware Store. Phones, 144 and 49. Garage 35 West Side Square BUTLER, MO. which shall be free on the seus | For Clover. on Thin Soil. now legally proscribed. The, . y . very agreement would by impli-; Speaking of straw calls to eation subject other “vessels to | mind the fact that for a num- illegal attack and would be a/ ber of years the best farmers in curtailment an|@ certain portion of Ohio have and develop, where on the same In the meantime the very val-'jed to the spreading of straw sets| wherever the man wanted clov- long and unbroken | ey, and he noticed that year af- ;ter year he secured stands of |elover on fields with his wheat, | where otherwise he would: have seenred nothing. For twelve years he kept this ;up until one day a many from }the experiment _ station hap- {pened to discover his ‘‘diseov- fery’’ and gave this information to the rest of the world. It is searcely ever known to fail, and - should be followed by the man who has trouble getting a stand of clover. necessity ‘Friendship itself ion by’ the commanders: of the ‘acts in rights Gov- ‘ i - friendly. | Two Lusitania Bodies . Found. SENG. is Washington, D. C., Ju! .|The American consul at. Que town cabeled the State. ‘}ment today that the bodiew J. Keser of Ph (Signed) ‘Twenty-one states of the’ “at the, Misodel State ia next fall. 2.

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