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CONGRESS IS ENDED AFTER 2-YEAR SESSION Legislators Revised Tariff and Cur rency System and Supplemented the Trust Laws, Created an Income Tax and Demonstrated the First Popular Election of United States Senators Washington. March 4. After two years of almost continuous session the Sixty-third congress, which revis ed the tariff and the currency system of the nation, supplemented the trust laws, created an income tax and dem- onstrated the first popular election of United States senators, ended at noon today. When gavels fell in the house and senate, signalizing the adjournment, they marked the close of half of Pres ident Wilson's administration, the first under domination of the democratic party since 1895. Strenuous scenes enlivened the fading hours devoted chiefly to completing the appropria tions for subsistence of the govern ment Two important measures, the postofike and Indian supply bills, failed in the final crush after desper ate efforts had been made to save them . In the emergency occasioned by their failure, joint resolutions were passed and signed by the president, continuing in force appropriations of the present year. While tired senators and represen tatives were devoting their energies to final essentials, President Wilson spent more than an hour in his room at the capitol, surrounded by members of his cabinet, signing the last fruits of legislation . The president found time in the midst of this task to greet senators and representatives, and he made the occasion entirely one of con gratulation, making no reference to projects which had failed. Scores of members of both houses joined tonight in an exodus from Washington, taking with them assur ances that no extra session of con gress would be called at least before the fall. Despite the fact that many important bills failed of consideration because of the long filibuster against the ship purchase bill, it was general ly understood that congress would be given a rest and the country a respite from legislation. It was regarded as extremely probable, however, that the Sixty-fourth congress would be summoned in October in order to be able to adjourn for the political con ventions and national campaign of 1916. COL. GOETHALS IS MADE MAJOR GENERAL U. S. A. Washington, March 4. Colonel Geo. W. Goethals was nominated to be a major general today in recognition of his service in building the Panama Canal. Four other nominations for promo tion of oflicers associated with Colonel Goethals were presented at the same time and all were immediately con firmed in an open session of the sen ate, an unusual proceeding. The oth er nominations were: Brigadier General William C. Gor- gas, to be major general, medical de partment. Colonel H. F. Hodges and Lieuten ant Colonel William L. Sibert, to be brigadier generals of the line. Commander H. H. Rosseau, U. S. N to be rear admiral. The bill providing for the promo tions extends the thanks of congress to the officers. GOOD ROADS MRS. BAXTER HINES PASSES AWAY Mrs. Baxter Hines died at her home in f orest i'aric at 4:10 aaturaay morning, March 6. She had been ill for a year but had been confined to her bed only the past three weeks. Mrs. Hinas leaves a husband and wo cniiciren. ane was tne oaugnter of T. E. Bowen, of Monett, and was born in Indiana, May 6, 1877. She had made her home here the past wenty-two years. Funeral services will be held at the M. E. Church, Sunday afternoon at 30 o'clock. SCHOOL FOR SUFFRAGE AT UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI Columbia, March 4. A school to prepare women for suffrage will be instituted by girls at the University of Missouri. This was announced to day as the result of a meeting of the Equal Suffrage League of University Women. Courses of study are being arrang ed which are designed to lead to an understanding of how to attain the ballot and how to use it wisely after it is gained. BRITE GRIFFITH Miss Grace Opal Griffith, of Peirce It were vain .to build a college For the youth to gather knowledge If the roadways leading to it Were a mess of ruts and mire, " And if swamps and dank morasses Barred the pathways and the passes Then a church were dead to service Thought it bore the tallest spire. , Light beneath a bushel hidden By the Master was forbidden For a buried gleam is darkness And a friend in trouble sore Has no kindly spirit near him In his hour of care to cheer him -Howsoe'er you wish to do it If you cannot reach his door. It were vain to build a nation If from station unto station Track of steel and wire of copper Did not hold the common touch; If a people could not neighbor In their hours of ease and labor All the splendor of their ages Then would not amount to much. Vain were all man's great inventions, And all buildings but pretensions If their usefulness and beauty Were confined unto the few; Here's life's secret to unravel, 'Tis upon the ease of travel That is based the final value Of whatever mortals do. You on your way, I on my way Must construct a better highway For the feet of those who follow . Who are journeying behind; If we leave life's road, no better Than we found it, we are debtor To our children and their children, We have selfish been, and blind, Stripped of tinsel and of gilding Life's road that we are building, And we're failing in our duty, If we only understood, When we find a grim and sad road, And we leave it still a bad road, Full of ruts and dangerous places, When we could have made it good. Edgar A. Guest in the Detroit Free Press. GOOD FERTILIZER HAS VAL UE AS SOIL CONDITIONER DRURY WINNER OF ORATORICAL MEET Springfield, March 6. Otho McAtee a junior of Drury college, was de clared the winner of the twenty-seventh annual oratorical contest of the Missouri Collegiate Oratorical asso ciation, held last evening in the Stone City and Forest Brite, of Monett, ' chapel at Drury college. With the ANNUAL MEETING OF COMMERCIAL CLUB There Was a Large Attendance And the New Oflicers Were Elected The annual business meeting of the Monett Commercial Club was held Thursday night at the Assembly rooms. There was a good attendance and much interest shown. A motion was unanimously adopted endorsing the work of the women of Monett in their attempt to secure a public park. A committee on entertainment for the County School Board Convention to be held in this city, Monday, March 15, consisting of H. W. Fly, M. J. Hale and W. F. Durnil, was selected. There was also the sum of $25.00 appropriated out of the general fund for expense of meeting and entertain ment. The following oflicers for the com ing year were selected: J. E. Sater, president; Ed Salzer, vice president and J. L. Hobbs, secretary. were married at Carthage Sunday at the home of Rev. John W. T. Givens, that minister officiating. Mr. and Mrs. Brite came at once to Mr. Brite's farm near Monett and there will make their home. The bride is an accomplished young lady. She is a graduate of the Peirce City high school. Mr .Brite is the son of the late Wm. Brite and is a young man of good 'character and with a promise of a prosperous future. FAVORABLE REPORT ON . ELECTRIC CHAIR BILL Jefferson City, March 4. Two sen ate bills of some public concern were reported favorably in that body this afternoon by committees. One is a measure introduced by Senator Hawk ins, which substitutes the electric chair for the gallows in putting crim inals to death and requires all execu tions of death sentence to take place' within the walls of the penitentiary. The other bill provides for voting on a proposition to call a convention to rearrange the constitution at the state printery in August, 1916. This measure was introduced by Senator Buford. Rhode Island Reds Choice cockerels for sale this month. W. A. Todd, Monett, Mo. w tf. PEIRCE CITY NEWS E. L. Jerome and family are going to move to Monett soon. Mrs. Hattie Paxton is still confined to her home by illness. Tom Murphy and wife attended the funeral of Tom Lanigan in Monett, Monday. Mesdames D. J. Heyburn and Ed Hogan drove over from Monett Tues day to visit friends. Mrs. Ed Johnson and two children of Neodesha, Kan., are here visiting her. mother and sister, Mrs. L. Solo mon and daughter Maybelle. Misses Lela Miller and Mabel Solo mon and Mrs. Otts King went to Mo nett Tuesday to visit friends, C. E. Shipman, who lives about six miles southwest of Peirce City, sold his farm a short time ago and bought a farm over near Wheaton, and will move to it between now and the first of April. W. E. Solomon and wife will leave Sunday morning for Nevada, where they go as delegates to the Woodmen Circle, which holds their annual meet ing for all the camps in the state. Leader. "Do animals possess the sentiment of affection?" asked a school teacher of a little girl. "Yes, ma'am; most always." "Good," said the teacher, "and now," turning to a little boy, "tell me what animal has the greatest natural fond ness for man." The small boy considered carefully and finally answered; "Woman.". E. A. Hughes has been quite ill for several days. He is improved today. winning of the state contest goes al so the honor of representing Missouri in the annual Interstate Oratorical contest to be held ' May 21, 1915, at Galesburg, 111., with ten states com peting. Mr. McAtee's oration was on "The World War Problem." Second place went to Craton Tutt, of William Jewell college, on an ora tion, "The Progress of Democracy." Government Expert Points Out Profit able Uses of Fertilizing Agents ' Other Than as Soil "Life Savers" r Chicago, March 4. "Fertilizers in some way and to some extent influ ence every known factor affecting crop production," states Frank K; Cameron of the U. S. Bureau of Soils, If this theory advanced by Mr. Cameron be true and it seems en tirely reasonable and acceptable it means millions of dollars to the farm' ers of the Middle West. Up until now they have been using fertilizer solely for the sake of feed ing crops and, with this purpose con sidered, fertilizers have paid well. But the idea that fertilizer should on ly be used when soils are' run down, has kept many from using plant food in the form of commercial fertilizer. Now Mr. Cameron advances the idea, in effect, that fertilizer not on ly adds plant food to the soil, but also acts as a soil conditioner. It is well known that soil bacteria must have the best of conditions un der which to work. Mr. Cameron shows that fertilizers help to produce these conditions. - It is a recognized fact that, in some soils, decay has produced organic substances harmful to the growth of plants. It is also known that fertiliz ers destroy the harmful effects of these plant poisons. RESOLUTIONS Whereas, our Heavenly Father has called from Monett Camp No. -4692 Modern Woodmen of America, our worthy Neighbor, Thos. Lanigan, and whereas the high esteem and fellow ship in which our loyal neighbor was held should be fittingly expressed, therefore be it Resolved that our charter be draped for 30 days in remembrance of our departed neighbor, and Resolved that we extend our sincere sympathy to the bereaved family in their sorrows, and be it further Resolved that these resolutions ' be published in the Monett papers, a copy sent to the bereaved family and a copy spread upon the records of our Camp. Again we hope to meet thee When the day of life is fled In heaven with joy to greet thee Where no farewell tear is shed. JOE AMBER, J. F. HUTCHESON, M. E. LOUTZENHISER, Committee. BIRTHDAY SURPRISE Friends of Mrs. V. E. Clinton gave her a surprise party, Thursday eve ning, in celebration of, her birthday. The evening was spent in playing games. Refreshments were served. . : Those present were Messrs. and Mesdames R. C. Farrow, Grant Rol leg, Sam Rittenhouse, Elwood Ash, Mrs. Anna Viles, Alex Meyer, of Car thage,' Edward and Clarence Ash, J. T. and W. J. Clinton, Virgil Bandy, Misses Essa Parker, Pearl Miller, Hazel and Fern Viles. 1 A Times want ad will bring results. SERVING THE WORLD More, important than the frequent assertion that America will soon be without a friend in any of the bellig- erent nations, is it to understand just what it is that the United States Gov ernment ' has undertaken. It has sought, first of all and naturally, to safeguard the interests of its own people and the dignity oi its own country. This is what England and Germany are pleased to call selfish So be it. A nation, like a man, must care first for those of the household. But there is something in the attitude of the United States Government since the outbreak of the war in Eu rope which runs far beyond our own borders. It is a service to the entire world that we have been endeavoring to do. For to uphold the rights of neutrals is to uphold the interests of the great "majority of mankind. Not only for the time of the present war, but . for the future conceptions and rules of war, is it of the highest im portance that at least one powerful nation should be steadfast in the cause of neutrality. It is like the protection which in every civilized country it is sought to give the "inno cent bystander." In all wars, there are more innocent bystanders than there are men engaged in killing each other; and it would be a truly humane thing, a service world-wide in its scope and enduring in its nature, to exalt and bulwark the immunities of the nations that remain at peace. J New York Evening Post, EGG LAYING CONTEST IS ON Buff Orpingtons Take Lead in Big Egg Laying Contest Which Began January 1 at College of Agriculture, U. of A. Fayetteville, March 2. Dean Nel son of the College of Agriculture of the U. of A., today issued the follow ing report on the state egg contest for the month of January: . 1. 12 White Wyandottes. . 134 12 Buff Orpingtons ........ 216 12 White Leghorns 98 12 Minorcas 35 12 White Orpingtons 155 12 Columbian Rocks . ...... 129 12 Brown Leghorns 99 12 White Rocks 45 12 Barred Rocks 38 12 White Orpingtons 35 12 Buff Leghorns 50 12 White Leghorns 44 12 White Leghorns 57 12 R. I. Reds 47 6 Barred Rocks 20 6 White Rocks 14 6R. I. Reds '....24 6 Anconas 4 6 Barred Rocks 1 6 olden Campies 26 6 W. Face Blk Spanish. .29 6 Silver Campies 26 6 White Wyandottes 25 6 Silver Laced Wyandottes . . 41 6 R. I. Reds 19 6 Buff Rocks 17 6 Brown Leghorns 32 6 Minorcas 10 6 White Rocks 23 "The results show clearly an advan tage for the birds longest on .the ground before January 1. Pens 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7 and 8 were on hand early. There are some indications that the heavier breeds possessed greater re sistance to cold weather, though it is not conclusively shown. Note the records of pens 1, 2, 5 and 7. . Condi tions were exact!;' the same for pens 2, 3, 5 and 8. Some pens contained rather young birds, and this is true especially of pens 4, 19 and 20. Rog ers Democrat. 9.. 2. 3. 4. 5. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 15. 16. 14. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. ' 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 1 ENTERTAINED FOR NEWLY WEDS Miss Fern Kingery entertained a few friends, Thursday evening for Mr. and Mrs. Chester Francis, who were married here, Wednesday eve ning and were leaving Thursday night for their home at Cherryvale, Kan. Miss Kingery served lunch to the following: Mr. and Mrs. Chester Francis, Miss Elizabeth Bowles, Lane Guinney, Len Robertson, Clifford Purdy, of Peirce City and Mr. Smith, of Springfield. The party accompanied the newly weds to the station and had a good time playing the usual pranks on such occasions. v . ERE AND THERE Mrs. Jl M. Clayton went to Joplia today for a short visit. Miss Shirley Patterson is quite ill with malaria. Miss Lucy Steadman went to Gran by, Sunday to attend the funeral of a friend. ' - Miss Rose Birkey. of Sarcoxie, is visiting her sister, Mrs. A. H. Doen nig, at 508 Benton. Mrs. Butler has returned to her home at Pittsburg, Kas., after a visit with her niece, Mrs. Tom Lanigan. Mrs. E. E. Harwood visited at the home of J. P. S. Planchon, in the coun try , Sunday. Miss Maude Flippin, of St. Louis, is visiting her sister, Mrs. J. M. Clay- ton. Mrs. T. L. Breese will leave this, evening for a visit with her daugh ter, Mrs. A. Pettefer, at Kirksville. Mrs. Steele Campbell is in a hospit al in Springfield where she will un dergo an operation. Miss Virgie Thomas went to Wash burn, Sunday after a visit with her sister, Mrs. M. McClanahan. Miss Willia Henbest visited over Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Henbest, north of town. O. B. Parrigon and family have been visiting in the country near Went- worth. -i ; . MONDAY EVENING CLUB ENTERTAINED Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Westbay enter tained the ' Monday Evening" Club Thursday evening at 7 o'clock dinner. Each table was decorated with a bou quet of jonquils in a basket. The menu follows: '. Oyster Cocktail Turkey and Dressing, Block Cran berries ' Potato Croquettes Fruit Salad Orange Ice and Assorted Cakes Following the dinner the time was spent in playing Rook, there being six tables of players. SUIT FOR PERSONAL INJURY D. H. Kemp has filed suit for H. H. Hawley, of 2123 Jefferson street, Springfield, for damages for personal injury sustained while, working as section hand for the Frisco. ' He was working in the yards at Springfield, February 11 when co-laborers dropped a piece of steel on him causing him internal injuries. The case will be brought up at the Barton county circuit court in April. Mr. Hawley is asking for $15,000 damages. M. E. Miller, one of the Corsicana millers, was in town on - business,' Monday, and left an order for job work at the Times office. Mr. arid Mrs. D. B. McCullough have moved to the Henslee cottage on Sev enth street. Miss Margaret Callan came home from Springfield, where she has been attending business college, Friday. Miss Christine Johnston is visiting her sister, Mrs. Elmer Carney, at Nevada. W. M. Pitts and Miss Effie Pitts were called down near Cassville yes terday evening on account of the ill ness of their grandmother, Mrs. T. J. McClure, who is not expected to live. Clarence Oldaker, who has been em ployed at Monett by the Frisco in the capacity o-ticket clerk for the past two months, has accepted a like posi tion with them in Springfield, and en ters upon his duties there today. Aurora World. BEING CONSISTENT "Charley, dear," said young Mrs. Torkins, "what shall I do with all these feathers?, I can't find a thing in this 'Helpful' Hints' article about them." ' - '' . ' ' "How did you get them?" "Why, you know, all helpful hints writers tell you that when you buy a steak you must have the butcher give you the bones and fat and all the rest of the trimmings. So when I bought this turkey I made' him give me the feathers." They Know It's Safe Parents who know from experience insist upon Foley's Honey and Tar Compound when buying a medicine for coughs, colds, croup and lagrippe. C. T. Lunceford, Washington, Ga., writes: "I have used it for six years and it never has failed. I think it is the best remedy made for coughs and colds." Sold by A. H. Cox & Co. J. D. Woolsey is again in the Fris co hospital in Springfield, for treat ment for heart trouble.' Mrs. Wool sey will visit him there tomorrow. Mrs. Smith, of near Purdy, was in town, Friday, on her way to McAl ester, Ok., to take treatment for rheumatism. Charlie Hall, of Sapulpa, Ok.,, who is seriously ill, was taken to Kansas; City, Thursday night to enter a hos pital. The Junior Philathea will hold a. business and social session at the home of Miss Clara Durnil, Thursday afternoon. - Miss Julia Campbell is ill this week and Miss Beulah Mooney is teaching in her place in the Marshall Hill school. . Mrs. J. E. Jenkins is enjoying a vis it from her aunt, Mrs. Dilman White, of Kahoka, Mo., and her sister, Miss Edith Wilson, of Mt. Vernon. , The three months old daughter of C. B. Williams, of Sand SDrines. Ok.. was operated on in Dr. Wm. West's hospital, Thursday morning. The little patient had double club-foot. The United States weigher of mails reported that the amount of mail sent out from the Menace, office during the week beginning February 22, was 73,000 pounds, or 36 tons. Earl Vinson had the misfortune to cut his foot severly while splitting kindling. Earl is at Monett, and Er nest went up to see him, Monday. He is getting along as well as possible. Rogers Republican. The Weekly Times and the Weekly Kansas City Star, both one year for only $1.00 cash in advance. If you want the Star be sure and ask for it when you subscribe. STRAWBERRY PLANTS Pure Aroma strawberry plants tak en from new patch, neatly . trimmed and tied in bunches, price $2.00 per thousand. Phone 932-12. John Sper andio. w27 t4 p. Proper Treatment for Biliousness For a long time Miss Lula Skelton, Churchville, N. Y.,. was bilious and. had sick headache and dizzy spells. Chamberlain's Tablets were the only thing that gave her permanent relief. Obtainable everywhere. MUSIC CLUB The Music Club will meet during the month of March with Miss Eunita Salzer. The first meeting will be Monday, March 8. A Specific Against Colds "If there is such a thing as a spe cific against colds, it is to be found in the sleeping porch . or the open bed room. Next to that comes the cold sponge bath in the morning," says the Youth's Companion. Be as careful as you can you will occasionally take cold and when you do you will find Cham berlain's Cough Remedy a great help in enabling you to get rid of it. Try it. Obtainable everywhere. VERONA NEWS Homer Lee spent Monday in Monett. John Turner of Monett was in Ve rona, Friday. , J. W. Young made a business trip to Monett, Thursday. Mrs. R. Grammer, Mrs. W. D. Beck and little son, W. D. Jr., and Mrs. T. J. Miller spent Tuesday in Monett.1 Advocate.