Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
shington Post. “The Coleman, Tex., oty com: Who to Succeed Hughes? ‘mission has purchased 1,200 fly}: traps for free distribution. defetted by. a vote of 64 to 49 th proposal submitted to the voters ae a connstitutional -amendment ting suffrage to women. It has been established that the} cruiser: Hampshire, whose de-| struction cost the life of Lord Kitchener, was sunk by a mine, it was announced by the admiralty. peutic GPa aR The Italian transport Principe Umberto has been torpedoed and *-|gunk.in the lower Adriatic with a loss of a large number of soldiers, according to an official statement issued by the admiralty Satur- day. ! would not hurry " choice. A Snug, Inexpensive Garage tank and six 250 barrel tanks of} i ah itil crude oil were set on fire by light- : me rap: Judicial Circuit, ning in a heavy-storm in the Cush-|9Uding Vermont, ing field Saturday morning. The | Comell Wood: For Wails, Ceiiings and Partitions gree murder for their part in the Columbus raid, were legally exe- cuted by hanging in the jail at Deming, N. M., Friday. Neither Mexican exhibited the slightest emotion and were calm to the end, “LOGAN-MooRE. LUMBER COMPANY YARDS AT—Passaic, Mg Si, og s Telepeone 18 Recuville, Mo hee utler, Missouri Revade. iy fo. : ment on a geographical basis. In a battle at Baton Rouge, La., Saturday, inside a negro church one man was killed and 21 wound- ed. Five deputies were sent to arrest Rev. Wilbert Holmes as he was preaching. The congregation rushed them. A pistol and razor fight followed. The officers won but two were shot. Judge Richard E. Burke of the]; Cook county, Illinois, superior]; to help whip the Mexicans, To the Farmers and Stockmen some cattle out of a field of grow- came sole owner of the paper. e years ago he bought the Washington, June 10.—Presi- it Wilson has not yet begun sideration of a successor to Justice Hughes on the supreme ench. Because of his recent sur- Vs of available lawyers prior to the appointment of Justice Bran- deis it was said at the White House tonight it would be easy for the President to make up his mind quickly, but as the supreme court recesses Monday until Oc- tober, it was thought likely he in making a _ Justice Hughes’s successor will be the third member of the court named by President Wilson. The fesicnation today leaves five Re- publicans and three Democrats on the court. It is expected that Mr. Make yo ble to work, in. as your,home., Line Three 55,000 barrel tanks, 21) .,. ‘i ie ; Us garage walls with Cornel Wood-Doard mm, 1,600 barrel tanks, one 800 barre oe aera etna fo in- Connecticut, Northern New York, Southern New York, Eastern New York I you lke to “carpenter” pot itup yourse’t. Applied right'te the studdine, Cornel loss will exceed $850,000. jand Western New York, While Reet pER SQUARE FOOT in fil tox toad tases, 7S Cone the President undoubtedly will b pe bi ochboaly the Cor! Woed Pradacts Co, (C, 0, Frise, Poenldent, Francisco Alverez and Juan SHURE OUP eear Wunaee aie cd a ald by the nde ined be SEER Sanchez, convicted of first de-|Ureed to select the new justice from the same circuit it is not be- lieved he will make the appoint- Kills Calf and Rabbit at One Shot. | A gentleman from the Nyhart neighborhood was a caller at this office one day last week and in- forms us that our friend. Robert Sproul, who lives just north of Nyhart, is getting himself a rep- utation as a marksman with a rifle and suggests that he would be a good men to send to Mexico One day recently he went out to drive itd grain which they had broken for Hot CHAS. A. $60,390 SPENT FOR SUFFRAGE PARADE. 4,000 Skirts and Equal Number of Waists Ruined by Chi- cago Rain. Chicago, June 10.—The high cost of parading caused the mem- bers of the parade committee of the Illinois Equal Suffrage asso- ciation to open their eyes. They held a ‘‘checking up’’ meeting and found that approximately $60,390 had been spent in beguil- ing the politicians to put suffrage planks in the Republican and Pro- gressive platforms. Here are some estimates: Four thousand ruined white skirts at $1 each, $4,000. Be Pri Get some PORCH CHAIRS and a SWING. You also need a new REFRIGERATOR. We have them at all prices. Don’t cook over a hot coal stove all summer. by using an OIL STOVE. Come in and let us show you the best line in town. SOUTH SIDE SQUARE Horses and mules.. {Cows red eather Keep cool MURRAY Big Cattle Sale at Amsterdam. Thursday, June 22, is to be a big day in Amsterdam: A. J. King of Kansas City will sell a car of milk cows and it is to be hoped that those in this eommunity hav- ing anything that they wish to sell will call at the Bank of Am- sterdam and list the same so that it can be included in the big advertisements that will be gotten out next week. Cols. J. Harlan Porter and Cecil Porter will cry the sale, they will be assisted in the ring by Col. L. W. Lent. : The following are prices for selling at Amsterdam Combina- tion Sale, June 22, 1916: . . $1.00 each 15 each court, died Saturda,” at his home in Chicago. Judge Burke - was one of the victims at Jean Crone’s poison banquet, and had never fully recovered from the effects of the arsenic which the chef had placed in the soup. The business of every man, whether he bea banker or a day laborer, is to render service; and he who, by reason of special fitness and in Ss ks can render superior. service, is the one who, i striving for success, usually succeeds—he wins be cause he deserves to win. Our reason for this little preamble is to call attention to our special fitness to carry on our siness, to-wit: that of the practice of Veterinary e. in a patch of weeds just beyond. The British cruiser Hampshire on which Field Marshal Earl Kitchner and members of his staff | were lost was sunk as the result our busines old son to open the gate. e had twelve years of successful bea iey Two- || of striking a mine, {t was official-| to scare the cattle, the bullet pass- mee ja Ser opt eg in a Oy. wa ly annonneed. All hope has been ing between the youngsters body Zea yo ane th years o abandoned for all save the twelve] and arm but fortunately -not in- men from the Hampshire Wo of medicine and fee! qualified hy acientificall ly ir live were washed ashore on a raft. adm dated ce the ifs at pox stock. your expense H. E.MULKEY Veteringry Surgeon Butler, Mo. Phones 268 and 3 Oifice and Hospital at Guyton’ ‘3 Barn, 200 West Ohio St. juring him. The Road to Hell. No experimenting at. Lieutenant Richard C. Saufley, U.S. naval flying aviator, fell to his death Friday at the Pensacola aeronautical station. To break the endurance record of 8 hours, 5 minutes, of sustained flight, Saufley ascended and kept at varying altitudes above bay and gulf. Suddenly the aeroplane dipped and fell 1,000 feet. caster, O., refused to permit the cussion of the question as to whether railroads were practical or not, and the matter was re- cently called to mind by an old document that reads in part as fol- lows: 3 ‘*You are welcome to use the school house. to debate all proper questions in, but such things as railroads and telegraphs are im- possibilities and rank infidelity. There is nothing in the word of God about them. If God had de- signed that his intelligent: crea- tures should travel at the fright- ful speed of fifteen miles an hour, by steam, he would have clearly foretold through his holy proph- Steven Asheraft killed his wife, E. A. Davis and himself Saturday at England, Ark. Jealousy is be- lieved the cause. Mrs. Ashcraft had instructed Davis, a rural mail carrier, to leave her mail at a neighbor’s house. It was while doing as instructed that Davis was shot., Ashcraft then returned home, killed his wife and self. If your engine is noisy, That an automobile under cer- - It is a eS Satan to : tain conditions is a dangerous|!ead immortal souls down to If it loses compression and power, weapon was held by Judge Mor-|hell.”"—Railway Engineering. row, in the Portland, Ore., circuit |, SER EGET If it fouls the spark plugs, court, ‘The case was that of C. A.|20,000 Militiamen Offer to Meet Cost to Fight on Border. Columbus, N. M., June 10.— with his automobile ridden down| Twenty thousand New York ne- a, motorcycle on the Columbus tional guardsmen are ready to -| come to the border for service in -|Mexico in the event of interven- ti on. Lieut. J. W. O’Mahoney of the New York coast artillery corps : this afternoon on a special : from Major General of the New York national to carry this statement to General Pershing. ant O'Mahoney is to : tinue his journey south to : Pershing’s headquarters. Warriner, accused of assault with a dangerous weapon in having . Then t ¢ cylinders need reboring and the pistons: ‘This may be doneat small expense and your. old engine made to run as Preosyantan nd powerfully as when new. a F youn rabbit or squirrel, (oak his rifle along. He saw a rabbit and taking careful aim fired, kill- ing Mr. Rabbit. When he went to pick it up he found that he had also killed a young calf which was Sunday he was going to drive the cattle from one field to an- other and sent his little eight year Forget- ting the boy, he fired the rifle In 1828 the school board of Lan- school house to be used for the dis- An equal number of ruined white waists at $1 each, $4,000. Overshoes for out-of-town con- tingent, $1,000. Five hundred raincoats at $2.50 apiece, $1,250. Railroad fare for out- of town contingent, $30,000. Hotels and lodgings for 1,000 out-of-town paraders at $5 a day, for two days, $10,000. Bands, slogan and ov erhead ex- penses, $5,000. One thousand umbrellas at $1 apiece, $1,000. In addition, suffragists figure that $40 was spent in carfare to the points where the paraders mobilized. A GOOD FRIEND. A good friend stands by you when in need. Butler people tell how Doan’s Kidney Pills have stood the test. Mrs. Stewart en- dorsed Doan’s over four years ago ‘and again confirms the story. Could you“ask for more convine- ing-testimony ? Mrs. John Stewart, 407 Vine St., Butler, says: ‘‘I had kidney trouble and rheumatism for about ayear.. The pains in my back were constant and felt as if some- one was trying to pull me in pieces. My head ached. The kid- ney secretions were often scanty. I felt sick and weak and just fair- ly dragged myself around. finally used a box of Doan’s Kid- ney Pills, procured at Clay’s Drug Store and they gave me great help. I continued taking them and they restored my strength. I had a better appetite, my weight increased and my health became | better.’’ (Statement given Sep-| tember 11, 1911.) On April 28, 1916, Mrs. Stewart said: “I shall never stop recom- mending Doan’s Kidney Pills to anyone who needs a good kidney medicine. They have never failed to keep my kidneys in fine condi- tion.” Price 50c at all dealers. Don’t simply ask for a kidney remedy— get Doan’s Kidney Pills—the _ Young cattle .50 each Sow and pigs ... .25 each BORIS arcsec 6 yes .25 each Young hogs .......... -10 each Farm implements....1 per cent on articles of $10 or more, 10 cents minimum.— Amsterdam Enter- prise. : Judge Gives $10 to End Tiresome Case. . Enterprise, Ore., June : 10.—To save Wallowa county the expense of trying a lawsuit, in which the litigants were only $10 apart, Judge J. W. Knowles, in the cir- cuit court, paid over that amount to the plaintiff out of his own pocket, and the suit was dis- missed. The suit was brought by J. A. Burleigh against Lillian Spicer. “T have been informed, ” Judge Knowles said, ‘‘that plaintiff and defendant are only $10 apart in this case.’’ The lawyers replied that was the truth. ‘‘Then I will give the plaintiff $10 to settle the suit,” said the judge, ‘‘and we can take up something of more conse- quence.’’ An Example of Thrift. > J. B. Page, living on a rural route out of Urich, was lookinng after businenss affairs in Harri- sonville last week, says the Har- risonville Democrat. Mr. Page is a striking example of what a hust- ler can do with a’ river bottom farm. Not many years ago he was working for wages on a farm. He was married to a thrifty wife and the two toiled and economized. They got a little start, bought a farm, eight miles southwest of Creighton, continued their indus- trious habits, raised a large family of children, and now have one of the best farms in that section. Masonic Notice. - Butler Lodge No. 254 A. F. & A. M. will install officers and con- fer the M. M. di same that Mrs. Stewart has twice publicly recommended. Foster- Milburn Co., Props, gs FA ‘also is to ask General Funston to\ask for the New York state at the first break of MULEKE VETERINARY SURGEON able to eet dames hash le a disributing station tor the legree turday night, June 17. Lunch will be served W. G. Dillon, Master. A. H. Culver, Secretary.