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Piedmont Weekly Banner from Piedmont, Missouri • 4

Location:
Piedmont, Missouri
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

A t-l emmak LIFE IS BEST AFTER FIFTY ginning Wednesday night and continue over Sunday. Let everybody come out to hear him. Orion. elir Hlamu'r Tn I'M1 vi Wi in' i'( rj ED I HADLEY. Rev.

Abbott was in Iladlev Wednesday evening. Pauline Pyles is pretty sick this week. Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Pratt were in Hadley visited friends last Sunday.

Dave Allison of Exchange is moving his family to Hruser creek this week. Mrs. John Waii.vvright is on the sick list. Pink Helvey of Ruble died March 23. Ed Wall's gave another pie supper Wednesday night and Miss Dellie Slusher got the cake for thfci prettiest girl.

Green Webb of lweper was it Hadley Wednesday on business Chas. Eursher of Greenwoot, Valley and Miss Laura Mill-maker of Van Burtn weri married last Sunday at Vt Buren, Carter county. Dave Conley made a flying trip this week to Piedmont. Mrs. May Julian of Garwood is visiting her parents, Mr.

and Mrs. Anderson Webb. Robert Hollin has been pretty sick this week. Lee Beaver moved this week to Eli Stiths mill on Brushy creek. lelplk.

Rev. J. L. -Steward filled his regular appointment at the Union Saturday and Sunday. He will continue the services during the week.

The Unioij Aid met at the home of Mis Emma Johnson last Thursday. They repot a large crowd and a nice time. Mrs. Mary Webb of Hadley returned home one day this week. She visited relatives at this place.

Walter Vaughn is added to the sick list this week. Mr. and Mrs. Hud Perryman are the proud parents of an eight pound bain girl. Unde Geoi ge Brower and wife, Sam Lewis and daughter Willie, attended Aunt Jane Randalls funeral at Iiedmont Thursday.

Mrs. John 1rator and son Karl departed for Steel ville, the last of the week. We hope Earl will gain hack his health which he has been losing for some tine. Miss Elma Lewis returned to her home at Reynolds, after a weeks visit with friends. Miss Naomi Copeland spent last week in Ellington visiting1 friends and relatives.

Mrs. Kate Record who went to St. Lmis some time ago, was called home last week on account of her son being very sick. YOU dont need to know that the binomial theorem in algebra was discovered by Newton in 1665 in order to count your change. Yon don't need to know that Numa Pompilius, in 738 B.

added two months to the calendar of Romulus in order to know the days of the week. You don't need to know the details of the banking system in order to trust your money with us. MOVE YOUR MONEY TOWARD US. THE BANK OF PIEDMONT P. H.

FULTON, Pres. A. BLAINE, Vice P. A. M.

LUNA, Cashier 31 PLACE YOUR ORDERS WITH C. N. WILSONS DAIRY TELEPHONE No. 73 Fur MILK delivered daily at your home. All our cows are first-class and our DAIRY is thoroughly sanitary.

A Paper for All Hands. In every family where The Youths Companion is taken it is read by everybody. The late Justice Brewer of the United States Supreme Court used to Mr. Sidney Fe. and wifejsay that if he could take only attended church at this place one paper, if.

would be The Sunday. Youths Companion a little of Little Elma Johnson has been everything in a nutshell, and real sick, hut is better at the unbiased. Justice Brewer had present writing. some of the best brains in the Mr. Ernest Prator left town in country, and he kept them in a hurry Sunday afternoon in his 'fine condition partly by reading 4 auto, bound for Hadley.

When about one mile from town, his auto got stuck in the sand hut with the aid of George does not fill the mind with know-Jones reliable mules he was ledge that is hind side to. But The Youths Companion. One never needs to unlearn what he reads in The Companion. It No Prv lou Period of One Existence fit ay Be Compared With That On. Neither the beauty of spring flower, nor the splendor of summer' harvests, equal the mellow affluence of autumn's glory.

For personal enjoyment and exercise of the nobler powers, human life Is at Its best after hfty; and, If personal experience be the criterion, the writer would suy, after sixty. Not for command, or for executive liiltlatlon, neither for animal pleasures, nor for worldly amusements, nor for easy conformity to the tyranny of social custom, but for pure delight In the higher realms of happiness, no previous period In life, no April, May. or even June or July of existence can compare with Its glorious October. Then are at their best the treasures of memory and of hope, the rich fruitage of Intellectual culture, the satisfying pleasures of the mind and the raptures of faith From these resources Is spread the table of life aa never before, and for the dally banquet at which eits a3 guest, the Infinite friend of man. Life, as It lengthens in perspective, becomes more Interesting, andltB outlook grander.

There Is ever more that one wishes to live for, here or hereafter. If one has cultivated his mind and taken a wider view of history and humanity, then for him the drudgery of textbooks, the grammar Nind dictionary are largely over. He sees with clear vision where he once groped to find a clue. He enters Into his Intellectual Inheritance. Where was the sowing Is now the reaping i heaves borne where once tears fell.

He Is no longer the heir, under tutors nnd governors, but the possessor of riches, of which no slump In the market, no panics or national convulsions can rob him. From The House We Live In, by Dr. William Elliot Griffis. Bang Went a Tire. It was like the crack of a rifle, out In the street, in front of our abode, but It was only a tire snapped.

The man got out and looked, and then got In and turned his auto homeward. Ills wife and child were In It, and they seempd prepared for a cool morning visit somewhere. It was too bad to have one's hopes thus crushed. These miserable old tires play havoc with many a bright anticipation. In fact, it is hard to Imagine an anticipation that can be so cruelly mangled as that which hears the crack of a treacherous tire.

Wont the happy time every come when the tire abuse will not afflict people; when the spring will be transferred from the wheel to the bed of the vehicle; when a man may go over sharp stones and recreant glass without fear and trembling? Where are Edison and Henry Ford and those other giants of Ingenuity why dont they do something? So we write with our heart going back with that disappointed family to mend their wheel flnH fair a nom StllTt, the morning. Columbus Journal. Englands Official Mind. I doubt whether German artillery will ever do one-half of the material and moral damage to this country's citizens that the official mind deals out weekly. I met the other day a marvelous case of the official mind.

The recruiting office was extremely busy and the ardor of recruits burning hot. The supply'of printed forms ran short. A lay helper said, We have a typewriting machine here. Let us type some forms. I can get them done as fast as they are needed.

The official lips, aghast, seemed to murmur, "Good God, man, this Is unthinkable!" Printed forms had always been used and must always be used. The recruiting office was closed, the ardent patriots sent away, and an official requisition for more official printed forms dispatched by post to the proper official quarter. Arnold Bennett, In London Dally News. Correspondents frequently fail to sign their names. Please do not omit this.

We will not publish the names. Editor. A Barbed Wire Cut. Collar or Saddle Gall not properly healed leaves a disfiguring ecar. Ballards SNOW LINIMENT I.

the Right Remedy tor All Abril. ton. of the Flh. If the wound Is cleansed and the liniment applied promptly, the healing process begins at once and U13 wound heals from the Inside outwardly, thus performing a perfect cure that leaves no scar. If the wound heals on th outside too quickly, pus rms under the surface and breaks out into a running Bore that Is hard to cure and Inevitably leaves a bad scar.

Owners ef blooded rtock pre- th' fer this liniment to all others for that reason, nnd they use It not only on line animals, but on human flesh, as It does Its work quickly and thoroughly. Price 25c, BOc and 1.00. JameiF.Ballard.Prop. Stephens Eye Salve Is a healing ointment for Sora Eye. Killing i.

r.ms'i 1 V.ir in A 1 .1 FLINCH. Owner Entered pic I osl at Pled-nvint. nam-nr-mnm tin- ugh the mail li' mh -riuMi infer DES RC I ItM raini ii It- 1 I.i iuaiul uiiili Until on tilt' 1 It i 1 1 itui road last week. This is ore of the (ldost towns on 1 1 Missipi'i river; almut fin) inluih.tan!' ai over half of them to iloivd people 1 hey have ehnivh and sehool hoiiro and sores. There were I'.

heats there work-; the ner. There is a at 's- th.e river from Com-eaitd 1' avetteville. They ina'; paetnre powder and dyna-mit O'ete. It is a Uautiful fare eoai.ty hetween there and I 1 in i s.r. so much prepara- tion i-: vear.

hi readv 1 as 2 ll'llili for a erop this are getting dry al- IiomI de Friday night; i lurch: heard Rev. lie is a line preacher, once a Dos Arc lie made a tine 1 wo rather hear iiim laii toe re.ichers. He is attel.lll a'. I' Jame- II Xea hov was th.ere talk, than certainly a convtrted man. We aro going to try to tret him to come to I es Arc and have him tell what I lie l.onl has done for him.

I was at Aiinnolis Saturday. Glia'. 11. lkdch was a ery busy man. He is runnintr thru- or four farms, saw mills and a handle factory.

He also furnished wheat last fall to farmers and trets half the crop. If the crop is good he ill do well. 1 was a' Sabula. U. L.

illins will rebuild this fall if times trets 1 letter, hut if we have another lot of legislators like we did have we are tome. We would have been several thousand dollars better off if they had stayed at home. Fred Farr is buying lies now, he has John Reed inspecting for him, this makes it good for the tie men. who are in need of work. M.

Ruhlo was in town Friday from Fiedinont, he is a merchant there and is doing a good business. Jas. Lovelace from Doniphan was here last week to see after his farm on ack river. Fete Ruble and Roy Walcott left Sunday morning for Kansas where they have employment. I).

F. Stevenson from Taskee was in town last week. Mrs. Reed has gone to Fairfield. 111., to visit her mother who is ill.

She will he away about three weeks. W. K. McKee was in Ironton Saturday to have dental work done. Mrs.

John Farris has returned from Iiedmont. Miss Ida White and Miss Wallis from Iiedmont spent Sunday here with the formers sister. Miss Della Keathley who has been visiting relatives here has returned home. (leorge Semands and family are visiting relatives in I)e Soto. In an article fiom the Ellington lrcss.

I notice where my young friend Rev. Fred Geitz on a visit to his brother-in-law, Senator Carter M. Buford at Jetterson City, while there preached a fine sermon to the inmates in the penitentiary, there was a special musical program rendered and the selections were very beautiful. R.no M. A.

Myers the M. E. minister failed to fill his appointment here Sunday owing to illness. He has been confined to his room for several weeks. We hope he may soon regain his health and be able to preach for us again.

He is a consecrated minister, a man of God. Rev. 0. L. Taylor will preach at the Baptist church here lie- The Feeling of Security is Worth The Small Cost We give the service, that should Go with the Policy The Piedmont Insurance Agency C.

H. and U. L. JONES, Managers. EX33 that is not all there is to The Companion.

If you want solid enjoyment, read some of the yarns about Caleb Peaslee- that appear every little while; read C. A. Stephens stories of the good old times down in Maine; read J. W. Schultzs stories of far-olf days when he was a boy among the Blackfeet who had adopted him.

The Companion is $2.00 a year 52 weekly issues. If you want to know more about the paper before subscribing, let us send you some sample copies. The Youths Companion, 142 Berkeley Street, Boston, Mass, Subscriptions received by the Piedmont Banner. Proper Treatment for Biliousness For a long time Miss Lula Skelton, Churchville, N. was bilious and had sick headache and dizzy spells.

Chamberlains Tablets were the only thing that gave her permanent relief. Obtainable everywhere. Lodge Directory Standing announcement of lodge zneeuss published in this colftmn for $3.00 per year. Resolutions published free for loages represent ed in this directory. ORDER OF EASTERN STAR-Pied-mont Chapter No.

347, meets first and third Friday nights, in the Masonic Hall, Piedmont, Mo. Visiting members welcome. MRS. LILLIAN BERRYMAN, W. M.

MRS. EUNICE SMARR, Secy. I. O. O.

F. Tertian Lodire No. 642, I. O. O.

meets first, third and fifth Thursdays to each month. W. T. POWERS. N.

G. S. G. McCOLU Sec. K.

L. DAFFKON. Fin. Sec. M.

W. of A. Piedmont Camp No. 4289, meet first ami thinl Saturdays in each month O. W.

HACKWORTH. V. C. T. E.

DAFFRON Clk. K.of Friendship Lotifre No 98 meets every Monday night. Visiting brothers welcome. O. W.

HACKWORTH, C. C. A. BANKS. K.R.S, B.

A. Ilodmont Homestead No. 3333 meets first and thiid Wednesday nights each month in M. W. A.

hull. Visiting Archers welcome. Ij. DAFFRON, Foreman J. A.

RANKS. Correspondent Better Have -INSURANCE- And Not Need It, Than To Need It And Not Have It. SANITARY Your Cold is Dangerous Break It Up Now. A Cold is readily catching. A rundown system is susceptible to Germs.

You owe it to yourself and to others of your household to fight the Germs at once. Dr. Pells Pine-Tar-Honey is fine for Colds and Coughs. It loosen the Mucous, stops the Cough ands soothes the Lungs. Its guaranteed.

Only 23c. at your Druggist. CLEAN pulled out about 5 p. bee. Till "TEXAS.

Dear Editor: I lease find enclosed $1.00 for which send me the Banner another year. I am always anxious to get the Banner. It is like getting a letter from old Piedmont. I can always hear how the folks of Wayne county are getting along. I am sorry to hear that times are so hard Lack in Wayne, on account of had crops.

There were good crops in the Panhandle last vear, hut it was the first for about five years. They think they will have a good crop this year. I think the Panhandle is the best country in Texas. It is a good stock country and best of all it is healthy. We have good water.

The wind always blows a little and sometimes a little more than I like. We had a pretty fair winter up till about the middle of February and since then we have had snow and rain till the ground is so wet it looks as though farmers will never get their oats sowed. I wish the Banner good success. Yours truly. R.

II. Wagner. Tulia, March 21. DR J. W.

MOTT Practice Limited to LYE, EAR, NOSE AND THROAT Eyes Tested for Glasses Davis Bldg. Poplar Bluff, Mo. Mrs. Mary Malloy Bolles TEACHER OF PIANO Your Patronage Solicited Telephone No. 45 Geo.

W. Daniel When needing Lumber, Shingles Paper Roofing, Doors and Windows and Builders Hardware R. D. HARVEY, Owner A Test for Liver Complaint Mentally Unhappy Physically Dull The Liver, sluggish and inactive, first shows itself in a mental state un- happy ami critical. Never is there joy in living, as when the Stomach and Liver are doing their work.

Keep 1 your Liver active and healthy by using Dr. Kings New Life Pills; they empty the Bowels freely, tone up your Stomach, cure your Constipation and purify the Blood. at Druggists. Buck-lens Arnica Salve excellent for 1'iles MASON 1C Wayne Ixxlyre No. A.

F. A A meets second nnd fourth Saturday nights, in their hall. Uicdnmnt, Mo. Visiting Brethren always welcome Wm. A.

MOSS. W. M. J. L.

BUNYARl. Secy. NS Soto unp rco wnt not.

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About Piedmont Weekly Banner Archive

Pages Available:
1,694
Years Available:
1913-1919