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Dental Notice. I have located in Oak Ridge a a a RESIDENT DENTIST. Will practice dentistry in all its branches. Examination and con sultation free. Office at Central hotel. Dr. Joseph H. Howard. Cape Girardeau A Chcatei R. R. Co. Time Card. SOfTH HOC NO. No. 1 No .1 Oak Ridge 3d 11.00 am Pocahontas 0.47 ll.l.t Frultland 7 02 11.2 Jackson 7.1 11.40 Cape Olmrde.iu Ar 8.00 12 2t pm. NORTH HOt'M P. 1 No. 2 No. 4 Cape G'rardcau Lv 8.30 ni 4 oo pin. Jackson U.iVi 4.43 Truitland 9.2 .1 10 rocahontn :v .V:U Oak Ridue 9..V) 6 .V) , ton, and the next day, if there is III Mad rhase. a Utte dent tnere the horn ia . Millions rush in mad chase af-1 dead; if not, put on a little more, ter health from one extreme of but not too much so the fluid runs addism to another, when, if they down as it will take the hair off would only eat good food, and where it goes. W. H. B., Con ikeep their bowels regular with cordia, Mo. Dr. King's New Life Pills their troubles would all pass away. iPrompt relief and quick cure for liver and stomach trouble. 25c. For sale by DR. S. E. WOODS, the druggist. From Whitewater. We haven't had anything to say of our town for some time. Health is good. We had a nice rain. Corn is looking fine consider ing th drouth. Wheat not as good as usual on account of the drouth. Whitewater is as pure a little tswn as there is in Southeast Missouri in every sense of the wonj Mr. Wilson Jones, our clever restaurant man, is now running a free deliverv wagon, and is pre- pared to deliver meats and all kinds of groceries at any time. Haller l Snider (The Boys) are doing their part of the merchan- dise business. They say they believe they have one of the best olorka thi M. of St. I.onis. Mr. Allie Carr of Caladonia, Mo. We also have two hotels in town, Nos. 1 and 2; the cottage State Fair, being No. 1. Harness shop doing good busi-, The State fair will hold its fifth neas, J. W. Nothdurft proprietor, annual exhibition atSedalia, Au- The ice cream supper that was gust 21-26, 1905. The greatest given last week, was well attend- fair in the history of the state is ed and thoroughly enjoyed. The already assured. The best horses, proceeds were to be used for the jacks, mules, cattle, swine and church. sheep bred in the United States, Brother Butler will preach his and many animals selected from farewell sermon next Sunday at the best herds in Europe, will be the M. E. church. Don't fail to on exhibition. The display of hear him. saddle horses will include animals Miss Maggie Searcy has a new royally bred, thoroughly trained lawn swing, and she says she ex- and unsurpassed in individuality, pects to do nothing the rest of Matched teams and single driv the summer but fan and swing; ers, the kings and queens of the and she has the finest pug dog in American road horse, are now in Cape county. preparation for an exhibition that Mr. Steve Searcy and Miss will evidence the superiority of Emma Bierschwall are now the the breed, and of the intelligence leading couple of Whitewater. of the American horse breeder. Mr. Harvey Smith, our painter, A number of Missouri counties a union man, and one of the best and localities from other states painters that ever struck Mis- have engaged space for an agri Houri, is now located here. Mr. cultural and horticultural exhibit. Chas. Searcy is assistant. The agricultural building is one The Whitewater Milling Co. is of the largest and the finest in dninTj a good business. architectural design on the Mr. Ollie Kinder has the school grounds. It will be filled to its apain. Mr. Kinder is an excel-' utmost capacity with the various lent teacher and the board should products of Missouri's fertile soil, be proud that they have got him 'This exhibit will be an unan back again, swerable tribute to the state's ag- We have two livery stables and one drug store. Mr. Alex. Akins has gone to work since his sweetheart left him. We have two grass widowers in town. They are boarding down town in hotel No. 2. Their wives are up in Horrick. Misses Meta Bierschwall, Ber nie Kinder and Daisy Dovore are now out of beaux. Boys, look out for the 4th of July. Brother Iceman has a new boarder ut his house, a ten pound boy having arrived the 21st of June. We are the ones. Nice Way to Dehorn Calvea. The beat way to dehorn is the day the calf is dropped. Let the calf suck ita dam all it wants, and then the calf will lie down and sleep soundly, and you can gj to it and hunt the little button on its head where the horn will start. There you can find a little spot that has no hair and you just rub a little caustic potash on that spot and the calf will not wake up from the operation. The horn will not start to grow and the calf will never know what happened and have as smooth a head as a muley. Get twenty-five cents worth of caustic potash and put in a bottle and just enough water to dissolve it and put in a glass stopper and when you want to , use some, takb a pine wood stick like a lead pencil and stick it into 1 the fluid and rub on the little but- "Meandering" at bone Farm. on a A town girl writes: "It is a fond dream of mine to become a farmer's wife and meander with him down life's pathway." "Ah, yes," remarks the Osborne News, "that is a nice thing, but when your husband meanders off and leaves you without wood, and you have to meander up and down the lane pulling splinters off the fence to cook dinner, and when yu meander alon& in the wet Sra" n 8earctl or the COW9 untu JTr she3 are the color of raw hide and your stockings soaked, and when you meander out across 20 acres of ploughed ground with a club to drive the hogs out of the a tear your dress on the bap w're fence- and when 'ou meander back home to the house' find that the billy Soat ha9 "tlf the stuffin out of your ?hlId' a"d fnd the old hen with '0Pty chlt;ken9 the parlor, on Pf yUr ha"d9 0 yUr hlPs and reahze that meandering is not what it is be." cracked up to ricultural greatness and an evi- dence of her wonderful resour ces. The departments of art, tex tile fabrics and pantry stores will show the domestic qualities of Missouri women. No other state can surpass them, possibly they have no equal. Every Misourian should attend the fair. If you cannot contribute to the displays go and learn something of the grandeur of the state, its unlimi- ed possibilities and the greatness it promises in the future. roiEYSKDNEYCURlE Makes KIyB H4 Blaadr Right PHONES i KcKlilencp l;(3 Oltlce - 10 D. E. SAWYER, VETERINARIAN, JACKSON, - - MO. WEST SIDE BARBERSHOP Hot and Cold Baths GEO. BELMAR, Prop., Jackson, : : Missouri. Orren Wilson, Attorney at Law AND Notary Public. Collections a Specialty. Cape Ulrardeaa, Mo. EDW. D. HAYS, Attorney at Law AND Notary Public. OrncK- Opposite Central Hotel JACKSON. MO. Sam Vandivort Compiles Abstracts of Titles from the only set of Abstract Books in the County. Your business will be given care ful attention : : : : : : : : Jackson, Missouri. R. S. WOLTER, DKALEK IN HARDWARE, TINWARE, STOVES. Roofing: and Guttering a Specialty. Call on him when in need of any thing in his line. He will treat you right. JACKSON, MISSOURI. Dr. J. L. Jenkins, RESIDENT 3HTTTTJ DENTIST Jackson, Missouri Over Schaefer's Store. Gold Fillings, Silver Fillings. Ce ment Fillings. Artificial Teeth. Teeth cleaned. Plates repaired. Painless Extraction free when Flatea are wanted. I visit Oak Ridge the second Mon day of each month, and tlie day fol lowing (Tuesday), Pocahontas. Dr. P. A. Geeslin, (Successor to Dr. F. M. (leeslin) OSTEOPATHY, MEDI CINE AND SURGERY. Chronic Diseases a Specialty. Office, 2d doornorth postofflce, upstaiis Telephone, 41. CONSULTATION FREE. Dr. C. V. Alsop, Resident Dentist. Dentistry Practiced in All Its lirauches. Office phone 178; Residence "S Anaesthetics for the painless ex traction of teeth used if desired. Examination and consultation free. All the work Is done in my office; none of it is sent away. Satisfaction guaranteed. Refer ences cheerfully given. JACKSON, MISSOURI. DR. G. S. HENDERSON, Resident Dentist. Or pick On South JHigh Street over Cape County Savings Rank, Jackson, Missouri. Office phone, 172; residence, 17?. OFFICE: Nnrthwent tor. Public Cuunre. Has Stood the Test 25 Years. The old, original Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic. You know what you are taking. It is iron and quinine in a tasteless form. No cure, no pay. 50o. Horses and Mules for Sal. For horses and mules apply at the Jackson sale stable. Always have on hand a good selection of country horses and mules. Schadb A Query, Jackson, Mo. Furious Fighting. "For seven years," writes Geo. W. Hoffman of Harper, Wash., 'I had a bitter battle with chronic stomach and liver trouble, but at last won and cured my diseases by the use of Electrio Bitters. I unhesitatingly recommend them to all, and don't intend in the future to be without them in the house. They are certainly a wonderful medicine to have cured such a bad case as mine." Sold under guarantee to do the same for you. 50c a bottle. Try the -n to-day. For sale by DR. S. E. WOODS, the druggist. Stick to Home. A traveling peddler comes into a community, sells a lot of more or less worthless goods and leaves town. His family, if he is for tunate enough to have a family, lives in some other town. He pays no tax for the schools, does not contribute to church or pub lic enterprise. The only interest he has in the community is to make a profit on his peddler's goods. For the protection of home merchants, who pay taxes, support schools, contribute liber ally to every public enterprise, the traveling peddler's license should be put as high as possible, says the Columbia Herald. Again, we say: A merchant, or banker, or county officer. n.eets the smooth-talking agent of a foreign printing house and, forgetting that the printing offices in his own county are home in stitutions and are forever defend ing home merchants, they never theless give their printing orders to the traveling man. Again: Sometimes, the home lawyer, desiring to take a trip to "the city" and posing as a man who has lots of business, induces his client to pay his way there and he has his brief work done in the big city. The three cases of buying from strangers, or those who have no interest in the county, are on a par. Are you guilty? Ex. Ourjury System. That great high respect in which the great American jury has been held is fast fading away, there can be no doubt. In the light of the many farcial verdicts rendered in famous trials, such as the "Nan" Patterson trial we wonder how much longer the sys tem will endure? The mental gymnastics necessary to swallow the old belief that the entire 12 must be for conviction, while one man may virtually acquit, by disagreeing with the other 11 ia we think as great a' contortion in mental gymnastics as is practiced in all other branches ot govern ment combined. We suspect that it is the ease with which jus tice is caused to miscarry, with the jury system as midwife that makes it cling, rather than its being a certain method of secur ing justice, because the culprit at bar does not want justice, in criminal cases, nor does the bar at large usually for they are oh the defensive. It has been a long day in Pem iscot since justice was done any of our criminals, and largely be cause of this much vaunted jury system, which is a fake in many of its phases, as applied. Pem iscot Press. The above is worthy of consid eration. It could be added that this abuse of jury rights, and the delay of courts is the cause of the people practicing mob law. There will be more of this prac tice if courts and juries do not give the people quicker and more just trials. (A Lirald Cure Constipation by Removing the Cause Makes you feel like doing your duty and builds up tired nerre. If you doubt it just ask any on who has triod it. It does notour everything , but it does euro constipation, indigestion and strengthens the kidneys, because that is what Lax-Fos 1 made for. Your money back if It dont. Price 50 cents, for sale by all druggist. Manufactured toy S. H, Winstead Medicine G..f Pducali, Kentucky FOR SUE BY DR. S. E. WOODS, HENDERSON'S CHAS. W. HENDERSON, Prop., West Main Street, Jackson, Mo. A Fearful Fate. I It is a fearful fate to have to I endure the terrible torture of I piles. "I can truthfully say," writes Harry Colson of Mason-1 ville, la., "that for blind, bleed-! ing, itching and protruding piles Bucklen's Arnica Salve is the; best cure made." Also best for' cuts, burns and injuries. 25c at DR. S. K. WOODS, the druggist. How long is it to be before the church shall be delivered from the incubus of stingy rich men? How any m:n whose income runs far up into the thousands can content himself with an annual contribution to the Lord's work of hundreds is a mystery we can not solve. That work is languish ing for money. Missions to for eign lands, schools, hospitals and new church buildings at home are absolutely clamoring for a wor thier support; while thousands of rich christians are satisfied to "meet the assessments," though they spend huge sums each year on carriages, automobiles, coun try houses, junketing trips, af ternoon receptions, extending their business, and in other pure ly personal affairs. How can they so forget God? Christian Advocate. Test of Device to Prevent lisions. Col- With the object of eliminating the element of human error in reading orders, a device has been imrantufl f s w r rt-xr -i r llni nail n.in i 111 T tlllCTli 1UI 71 IT 11 bill g I UUl VSl'. collisions which was given a test recently before a large number of railroad men near Pittsburg. The test took place on the east ern division of the Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne Jb Chicago. There were seven blocks in the five miles of track set aside for the purpose, and whenever it was necessary the new invention set up in a pas senger coach, automatically shut off the steam and applied the brakes without the assistance of the engineer. Tests were made at speeds varying from 35 to 60 miles, and in every case the new machine is declared to have worked with satisfaction. Rail way World. LutUva) THE BRUI81ST, JACKSON, fctt. Lur.iBEn, LATHS, CEDENT and all BUILDING MATERIAL at LUMBER YARD, N Notice. I will be in Jackson Wednesday and Saturday of each week dur ing the summer and fall. If you want fish see me on those days. Alex. Reed, 7-13 Neelys Landing, Mo. A Queer Will. Arthur A. Blumer, born in France, April 23, 1815, but who had lived at Fredericktown for nearly half a century, died, last week, and left a queer will, which contained these provisions: "I believe in the religion of hu manity as announced by Confu cius: not to do unto others what I would like others not to do unto me. I do not believe on the false, brutal and immoral traditions im posed upon ignorant and credu lous people as the word of God. I do positively forbid any prayers whatsoever upon my corpse, which shall be buried upon my lot in the Odd Fellows' cemetery, near my son's grave, to be brought there by a one horse light wagon, without any display or pomp or the humbug of the hearse, and buried in a vaulted grave with bricks and cement; a coffin and its case robe of white oak board. However, as some sympathizing friends might fol low my corpse from my house to the grave, I desire that a band of music, if there be one in reach, shall accompany my corpse to the grave and play alternately the Wlarseillese Hymn' and the 'Star Spangle Banner.' A mod est black granite stone on my grave shall bear the following words: 'Cigit A. A. Blumer, 1815,-19,' and this motto: 'Magni mamenti est animo li ber;' at head of stone this mot to: 'Pystas is tin Patrida.' "In a book you will find these words, God is love, Love is God, also who has seen the Son has seen the Father." The funeral occurred, and while there was no prayer, his neigh bor and friend E. D. Anthony, delivered a pretty address over his remains. There was no band available, but otherwise the fun eral was conducted as requested. Fredericktown Democrat News. I II