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THE MONETT WEEKLY TIMES FRIDAY, MAY 24, 1918. SOUTH OF MONETT BIRTHDAY PARTY Rev. Goodnight filled his appoint ment at Mt. Pisgah Sunday. Misses Ethel Lee and Opal Davis, Frank and Henry Balmas motored to Mnett Saturday. Mrs. Fred Thomas and Mrs. E. B. Thomas were shopping in Monett bat urday. Miss Blanche Walton spent last week visiting her father in Sr-ing-field. Mr. and Mrs. Homer Morris visited with Mr. and Mrs. John Jacques Sunday. Miss Olla Niskern spent Wednes day in Purdy. Mrs. Pat Willis and daughter, of Monett, are visiting her parents, Mr. and .M'-s. Jake Marbut. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Snyder and children, of Monett, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Niskern. Mrs. Bert Robbins and daughters, of Monett, spent Sunday with L. C. Robbins and family. There will be all-day services next Sunday, with dinner on the ground, at Mt. Pisgah. Everybody come. Mr. and Mrs. Herschel Carlin and daughter motored to Monett Satur day. Miss Julia Robbins spent Sunday with home folks. Misses Jewell Carlin, Julia Mon nett, Myrtle and Olla Niskern, Messrs. Millard Davis, Ermil Lance and RaV- mon! Marbut attended cnurcn ai xno nett Sunday night. SURGEONS agree that in cases of Cuts, Burns, Bruises and Wounds, the FIRST TREATMENT is most impor tant. When an EFFICIENT antisep tic is applied promptly, there is no dancer of infection and the wound begins to heal at once. For use on man or beast, BOROZONE is the IDEAL ANTISEPTIC and HEALING AGENT. Buy it now and be ready for an emergency. Price 25c, 50c, $1.00 and $1.50. Sold by Logan D. McKee. illfflMIMMUI'liiilM H'lll.llJIJJ.IJLJJlJIII.lV Bargain Basement SPECIALS FOR SATURDAY Look for the Remnant Counter. New lot of remnants of lawns, percales, silks, shirting, toweling, etc., all at less than the manufac turerer.s' cost. 25c Crepe de Chine and Linen Handkerchiefs sale price 20c Women's $3.00 and $3.50 Gun Metal and Patent Leather Shoes, high and low heel sale price - $2.45 SOAP SALE Palm Olive, Ar mou's Venetian Bath Soap, Glycerine, Elderflower and Al mond Cocoa all on sale Saturday at 10c Marquisette Curtains, in cream and white, hemstitched borders, 2Y yards long Sale price, pair 98c Children's Gingham Dresses, 75c, for ages 6 to 14. Well made and of good quality gingham. Misses' Hose, 15c. Misses black or white hose, all sizes, 5V to 9. This is your last chance to buy hose at this price. Ladies Silk Hose, $1.25. These are seconds of Cinderella, regular $1.75 values. The colors are black, white, grev, brown, pink and champagne. Come look them over. You w ill be surprised at the values. EARNS 14 CENTS A DAY; HAS WIFE AND BABY Yet This Trur Story Has a Happy Ending. PLEASANT DALE Dr. E. P. McCormick and Miss Burns, a nurse, left Friday night forj New Orleans, La., after a two weeks' visit with W. T. McCormick and family. Mrs. Walter Friddle and children visited at the home of Frank McCub- bin Thursday evening. W. T. McCormick and family pic nicked at Bethel and Spout Springs last week. Everyone in the neighborhood seems to be busy with the berries, but are in need of more pickers. Mrs. Bowen, of Purdy, visited her sister, Mrs. Frank McCubbin, Friday. Mrs. Charles McCracken and chil dren left for Miami, Ok., Thursday,: after a few days' visit with her par ents. Bertha McCormick has been quite ill the past week. W. T. McCormick and family mo tored to Verona and Aurora Thursday. TO TRY AND IMPROVE Those of our customers who have watched the progress made by this store have noticed particu larly one trait our constant en deavor to surpass our best efforts of the past. We are by no means perfect- nor do we even hope to attain per fection. But we are trying hard to make this store the kind of store you like to shop and trade in. For first-class Dental Work go to Dr. J. P. Woods, upstairs in State Bank Building. tf We have Porch Swings and Chairs ready for your inspection now. Come Barbed wire cuts, ragged wounds, I and see them. Bob Callaway. collar and harness galls, heal up auicklv when BALLARD'S SNOW -New Summer Clothes for the men - I . LINIMENT is applied. It is both ln m Beach, Cool Cloth and Mo- healing and antiseptic. Price 25c, 50c nr at Gulick s. Our store is for and $1.00 per bottle. Sold bv Logan Quality, first and always. 69-tf D. McKee. NOTICE, GARDENERS! You can get tomato, cabbage, pep per and sweet potato plants of Trit- -tf LAST CALL! On account of the enormously in creased and constantly increasing ton Floral Company. Cost of Droduction and mailimr. the present special rural route rate nn HUMJ. 1JN .MOM. 11 the Dailv St. Ixiuis Globe-Demo. t . Should have a good cedar chest will be withdrawn July 1, 1918. your lurs ana woo'ens from the Until June 3n fmdv until ,. an. moin- we and see wnat we are yearly subscriptions will be accented showm&- H- L BRADFORD. for the Dailv ninho-TWruvuat tn ha I 21-tf ID 9 llol Oil VeV flMi vrwini.'infa 4'lim'u v w.,-- ,,v , T afiioc' ,;. ,.J CU !,,,,. papers by rural free delivery or stor K' . , Oxfords or Strap Slippers can be route and at post offices not served ; i i.u.1.1. j ., . . , .. , 1UUIMJ J 1 1 vaiiuuA un,ift at VJU1JCH. - hJj"nSde& e?: at thC present These are Quality shoes, first and al- never-to-be-repeated low rate, Daily, without Sunday, $3.00 a year T-v -1 1 1 M . j-any, including Sunday, $5.50 a year. ways. 69-tf DAYTON AIRLESS TIRES Rifip as pasv as ttipiy tiroo Vn r-very suDscripnon must be lor one such thin as blow-out or nuncture. year, no less and no more. Orders Think of the iov whpn v W,w no t xt i t a I ...u rc.. une uiooe-.emocrat omce guch thing as puncture jj j in ou uui uu oi ueiore dune u, Bradford. 46-tf After July 1, 1918, the prices will CUT OUT THE GRAFT l, . r-:i.. i , a. I . . . . . . . uauy, wim.u. ounuay, a year. i rne Dest artinciai teeth, euaran- Daily, including Sunday, $7.50 a year, teed to fit and look well, for $10 a Even a Frenchman sometimes loses, for awhile at least, his "unfailin" sense of humor. Take, for Instance, the case of a man from Lille, a soldier, Waeltele by name and only twenty-three. He had done pretty well, for the youngster had already his owi printing shop In that northern French town, which Is still In side the German lines. In the trenches Waeltele developed tuberculosis, and be was sent to a hospital at Grenoble. There he was considered incurable, and after -the usual three months of treatment he was granted his 14 cents a day pension. Said his fatherly army doctor, "My son, you can perhaps cure yourself If you will live in the moun tains, if you will eat plenty of nour ishing food and, above all. If you don't worry." Waeltele should have smiled, but he didn't. He was thinking of his baby and his wife and his 14 cents. "Don't worry!" The humor of it entirely es caped him. Then the Red Cross stepped In. He was found by an American woman with some American Red Cross money for just such cases, and within a few hours he no longer had need to worry. He was sent to the mountains at La mure, In the French Alps, happy In the knowledge that his family was be ing cared for by these amazingly kind Americans. And now the army doctor's words are coming true. Wael tele's lung is healing fast, and be Is dreaming of another printing shop and of living again some day with that little family. There have been over 400,000 new cases of tuberculosis in France since the war started, and to care for these cases and check the White Plague's spread Is merely one of the big jobs the American Red Cross has set out to accomplish. A pleasant surprise party was given by Mr. and Mrs. Otto and Mrs. J. D. Buckholz in honor of J. D. Buck- holz's birthday Friday night, May 17, to several of their friends and rela tives. Sandwiches, cake and other refreshments were served by Mr. and Mrs. Otto Buikholz. The birthday cake was decorated with 64 little can dles, as it was Mr. Buckholz's sixty fourth birthday. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. (Innrrrn Srl-inrl Mi- nd Mv Trbn Mueller and daughters, Mr. and Mrs. Casper Schad and family, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Petlitzer, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Buckholz and daughter, Mr. and "Mrs. Paul Block and family, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Schallen and family, Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Casper and fam ily, Misses Tine, Minnie, Selma and Elsie Geske, Augusta Mueller, Lucy Schad and Paula Schneider, Messrs. Fred Rupp, Gust and Otto Schad. All enjoyed a good time until a late hour, when they departed, wishing Mr. Buckholz many more such happy birthdays. ONE PRESENT. DUROC JERSEY HOCS S SALE I have several extra nice pure bred Duroc-Jersey gilts, from sows of the large litter kind, that are bred to farrow pigs in Sep tember. These gilts were sired by Long Model No. 188887, a pig of Grand Model No. 161639, the $2,000 hog that won fame by winning Champion and Grand Champion at Iowa, Minnesota and South Da kota state fairs in 1914, and they are bred to Mapletonian No. 257137, a pig of Appletonian No. 211995. If you want something good, both as individuals and blood lines, that will raise you a litter of pigs this fall, come and get your choice for 25c per pound. Papers furnished. LOREN P. WITHERS 4 Miles Southwest of Monett. K. & E. Undertogs for the children can be found at Gulick's. The most comfortable underwear for children. We sell Quality, first and always. 69tf IN REMEMBRANCE Sunday only, $3.50 a year. Never again will you have an op portunity sucn as is now open. Prompt action is necessary. FARMERS, ATTENTION! Harvest time is now at hand. We are ready and willing and anxious to set. The most sanitary crowns and bridges at prices you can afford. Re member that I cure persons of pyor rhea. Dr. L. West, Dentist, 210 Third street, Monett, Mo. 41-tf ARTISTIC HEMSTITCHING Beautiful Buttons, made from your serve you in insuring your grain in ovn materials; Box, Knife and Ac stack, rick or any place on the farm cordian Pleating. Prompt parcel post against loss by fire and lightning, delivery. Write for samples an'J the rates are very reasonable. We prices. also write hail insurance on growing m LAURA H. HUBBLE, crops. Companies represented are Springfield, Mo. the best. Give the best indemnity for Third Floor Reps Dry Goods Co. the least money. d&w-tf SIG SOLOMON, Agent. FARM FOR SALE 119 acres, 5 miles northeast of LEARN Telegraphy, Shorthand, Monett; 6-room house, good cellar, Touch Typewriting, Bookkeeping, 40x50 bam with shed, good well with Basking; the demand for our gradu- pump; school house on place; $70 per ates ib greater than the supply. Ask acre. Give possession August 1. for catalog. Aurora Business Col- Write or phone S. R. Buehler, Verona, FATHER AT WAR, TRAGEDYAT HOME Just What Home Service Means to a Soldier. The father kisses his wife and kid dles goodby, shoulders bis gun and marches away to war. For a time the current of life flows smoothly for the soldier's little fami ly. Then comes the tragedy. Mother Is taken Hi. The little brood of broth ers and sisters is helpless. No father to turn to. A helpless mother I To whom An the American soldier's family look at this critical period! Must a brave man's loyalty to his country mean desolation and suffering to those nearest and dearest to him? No I Emphatically no 1 The Ameri can people will not permit the fami lies of their soldiers and sailors to suffer because their breadwinners are fighting for their country. And so the Red Cross Department of Civilian Re lief has created a nation-wide organ ization for home service for the fami lies of soldiers and sailors. Under the banner of "Home Serv ice" patriotic men and women have enrolled and are devoting themselves to the noble task of helping soldiers' families to meet and adjust the prob lems of everyday life and aiding them to maintain the standards of health. education and Industry. Home Service True Service. Home service means keeping the sol dier's children well and In school. It means tiding the family over financial troubles, arranging the household budget, meeting Insurance premiums. adjusting a mortgage, bringing med ical aid and legal advice to bear at the right moment In short "Home Serv ice" is true service, ln that it provides the warm handclasp of friendship rather than the humiliation of charity. It calls for sympathetic understanding and intelligent consideration of the most vital needs of the soldier's family. The lied Cross Is pledged to "Home Service" wherever needed in the Unit ed States. In each chapter of the Red Cross there will be a home service section, under competent hands, whose mission will be to protect the welfare of the soldiers' and sailors' homes and to safeguard the normal development of their families in employment and ln Ideals of self help and self reliance. Herman Opalka died at his home Friday, May 17. Herman was 54 years, 3 months and 17 days of age and was ill only twelve days before his death, which was due to pneu monia. Funeral services were con ducted by A. C. Meyer at the German Lutheran church, after which inter ment was made in the cemetery near by. Scarce 54 years had passed when the Father thought it best to take him to his heavenly home to lean on Jesus' breast. For days and nights we watched with care for him. We did our best, but now he is sleeping in his grave. His spirit is at rest. The many flowers the neighbors took proved to his folks that we loved him, too, and were sorry that he died. But he is gone and we are left, and why we cannot tell, but from His Holy j Word we read, "God doeth all things well." Sweetest thoughts will ever linger around the grave where he was laid A FRIEND WHO LOVED HIM. PUBLIC SALE OF LIVE STOCK At my farm 4 miles west and 1 mile south of Purdy and 5 mile west of Corsi- ADMINISTRATOB'S NOTICE With Will Annexed Notice is hereby given that letters of administration on the estate of Mary M. Day, deceased, were granted to the undersigned on the 13th day of May, 1918, by the Probate Court of Barry County, Missouri. All persons having claims against said estate are required to exhibit them for allowance to the administra tor within six months after date of said letters, or they may be precluded from any benefit of such estate; and if such claiims be not exhibited within one year from the date of last inser tion of this publication they will be forever barred. This 13th day of May, 1918. EMORY SMITH, Administrator. Attest: C. M. LANDIS, Judge of Probate. First insertion May 24. Dizziness, vertigo (blind staggers), sallow complexion, flatulence are symptoms of a torpid liver. No one can feel well while the liver is inact ive. HERBINE is a powerful liver stimulant. A dose or two will cause all bilious symptoms to disappear. Try it. Price 50c. Sold by Logan D. McKee. miles east and 1 mile south of Fairview and cana, on old Grant Blankenship place, FRIDAY, MAY 31, 1918 Sale commences at 10 o'clock a. m. Twenty-one head of Cattle good milch cows, heifers, calves and a 2-year-old Shorthorn Bull, full blood. Two Horses One bay mare and one black mare. Good ones. Two Mules One pair yearling mules, a mare and a horse. Good matches. Sheep Five head good ewes. A high grade Shropshire buck lamb. Hogs Forty-five head of good stock. Duroc and Poland China sows with pigs, 30 head of shoats two months old. They are the big, mellow kind and in good condition. Jennets A black jennet 5 years old and a black jennet 1 year old. Put in, sale by Paul Decocq. Usual terms of sale. Lunch will be served by the ladies of the Red Cross. A. O. WILLIAMS, Owner AL HUDSON, Auctioneer. W. C. DICKSON, Clerk. MT. GROVE Strawberry picking is the order of the day. 'There was a large crowd attended church, at Macedonia Sunday. Miss Effie Morlan is staying with Mr. and Mrs. Jewell, at Purdy. Charlie Rodgers, of Camp Funston, has been visiting his wife, Mrs. Agnes Rodgers. Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Rodgers vis ited Mr. and Mrs. V. H. Marbut from Saturday until Monday. Mrs. Ben Herfderson and son and Miss Reta Inman were shopping ln Purdy Friday evening. Miss Ina Fly, of Monett, visited her parents, Rev. and Mrs. C. A. Fly, Sat urday night. Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Hughey went to Purdy Saturday. L. H. FERGUSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Durnil Building. Office Phone 23. Residence Phone SOS Home-grown Potatoes, 20c a peck, at Matthews' Grocery. 23-tf Sallow complexion is due to a tor pid liver. HERBINE purifies and strengthens the liver and bowels and restores the rosy bloom of health to the cheek. Price 50c. Sold by Logan D. McKee. Mr. and Mrs. Jake Patton and Miss Helen Guinney motored to Sarcoxie Tuesday and viewed the world's great est peony fields. LOST Diamond ring. Return to The Times office and receive reward. DR. ALVA JONES Physician and Surgeon Specially prepared to treat diseases of the eye, nose and throat. Eyes scientifically examined and glasses accurately fitted. Office: Corner Broadway and Third St OR. T. E. HASTINGS OSTEOPATH PHYSICIAN" Office Over Durnil's. Office Phone 309. Residence Phone 684 JERSEY CREAM DAIRY CO. Fresh whole milk. Separated milk and fresh separated cream delivered at your door. A high class registered Jersey herd. Phone Orders to 239, Monett. Men's High Art Clothes at Gulick's, Quality is always considered first and price last at our store. If you would have good clothing, come to us. 69-tf "The work that the Red Cross Is doing In France this winter Is worth more than a million and a half American soldiers In the lines In France today." General Petaln. You are Proud of the spotless spick arid span neatness of your kitchen For These Reasons We Have Installed a We are proud of the way we protect Food until it reach es your kitchen HUSSMANN Patent Refrigerator Freezer Counter Prevents Handling, Sneezing or Coughing on Meats Contact of Flies and Dust or other Germ Breeding Elements. IF YOUR MEATS COME FROM OUR MARKET you are assured they are FOOD Good Pure Clean Thoroughly Hussmanized E. F0LGER MONETT, MISSOURI PHONE 86 210 FOURTH ST. lege, Aurora, Mo. 29-tf Mo. 62-lm