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/ Farm Loans If you contemplate negotiating a loan call on or address | C.R.HOME BUTLER, MO. IN PEOPLES BANK, {Farm for Sale. Here is an easy way to sell your Farm . Every building you PAINT adds to the and therefore attracts attention and tavorable comment, addition to this it lengthens the life of the building. appearance of your farm, In Every gallon of Sewall’s Pure Liquid Paint you use INCREASES THE PRICE PER ACRE of your farm, Many people are making fortunes buying. old shabby-looking farms, painting up and selling them again at a big profit. If you want to sell or if you don't want to sell it will pay you to paint. Now this does not apply te every paint, but it does to SEWALL'S PAINT, which is fully guaranteed and always satisfactory and has been on the marked for over a Quarter of a Century. Why pay more for paint when you can get this reliable brand for a reliable price? At LOGAN-MOORE LUMBER 6O., Headquarters for GALVANIZED IRON, RUBBER ROOFING AND LUMBER, a YOUR, BANK IF not, WHY not the PEOPLES BANK? This GROWING and NEW CLEAN BANK, SOLID, and with AMPLE CAPITAL, managed by long tried and efficient officers and a STRONG board of directors should be consid- ered when selecting a place to do your banking business. Get acquainted with the PEOPLES BANK. Use its daily market report, its desks and sta- tionery when you want to write a letter, and its large fire-proof vault when you want a place of safety for your belongings, it will cost you nothing. Open an account with this bank and grow with it. The Bank on which You can Always Bank. PEOPLES BANK BUTLER, MISSOURI. Butler, Missouri $55,000.00 $76,800.00. Capital, - - - - Surplus Fund and Profits - : Loans money on farms in Bates, Vernon, Barton, Cedar, Dade and Polk counties, Missouri, on five or seven years time at low rates of interest and with privilege of pay- ing part or all before due if desired. We own a complete and reliable set of Title Abstract Boods of Bates county, showing the record title of each tract of land or town lot from the United States entry down to date. We farnish reliable abstracts on short notice. We issue Time Deposit Certificates payable in 6 or 12 months bearing five per cent interest for any idle money you may have, onsider it. “I object to being “Co-ed” a Word of Reproach. | they « Codeustin. Sip Mand) jealled & co-eds, sop one girl promi- en students o vers 8 in student affairs sour! are obj to he wirls talk « think 1% would be well to get rid of a meeting to decile ways 468 | this word of reproach before it does this term of reproach, as | any tu r damage.” PPPS LS AL AAAS ALEAG LALA, A A AeA AE OS. esl The Walton Trust Co ‘ ? $ : Easy to Mix This. What will appear very interesting French Named Ozarks. University Missourian: “Down in| “Girls are | the Ozarks,” or “He comes from the|to many people here is the article wore co-eds than are the men. || Ozarks,” are expreselons frequently | taken from a New York daily paper, | | heard by students in the University | giving a simple prescription, which jotMissourl. Few pereons know, per-|is said to be a positive remedy for | haps, how the name happened to be| backache or kidney or bladder de given to the hills or low mountains in southern Missouri and northern Arkansas. “Ozarks” is @ corruption of two French words, “aux ares,” which mean “at or in archs or bows.” The name was given to the mountains probably by the early French ex- plorers on account of the shape ofthe hills, The Ozarks are not an isolat- ed chain of mountains, appearing only in Missouri and Arkansas, but of Bright’s disease: Fluid Extract Dandelion, one-half} ounce; Compound Kargon, one | ounce; Compound Syrup Sarsaparil- la, three ounces, Shake well in a bottle and take {n teaspoonful doses after each meal and again at bed time. A well known druggist here at home, when asked regarding this prescription, stated that the ingred- Notice of Sale. Whereas, ¢n August Mth, 1908, J. C. Collins, by his chattel morigage of that date, filed in the office of the Recorder of Deeds August 20, 13 being No. 5774, sold, transferred and set over unto J. M. Christy, tosecure tosaidJ M. Christy the payment of a certain promissory note of $600, due 180 days after date in said mortgage described, the following property to- wit: One Sulky rake, ‘‘McCormick’*; one !2-foot bull rake; one ttley end-gate seeder; four riding cultivators, Sattley..one 6-foot MeCor- mick mower; one 8-foot McCormick binder; one 18-foot harrow; two lt-foot cut-away disks, Sattley; one corn planter, edge drop, sattley; two M-inch gang piows; one sorrel horse mule, seven years old, weight 1,000 Ibs; one brown horse mule, seven years old, weight 1,000 Ibe; one span sorrel horse mules, 6 years old, weight 1,100 Ibs each; one black ho ven years old, weight 1,400 Ib yearsoli, weight 1,350 Ib years old, weight 1,800 Ib years old, weight 1,475 lbs; Fy Star in forehead, 7 years old, weight! together with all increase of said sto y being then on what is known ton Kanch, 0.5 8, the undersigned is now owner and holder of said note and mortgage; And whereas, said mortgage provides that in case default’ be made in the payment of said note when due, the mortgagee may take pos- 6 | heritance, is wholly unknown to this plaintif, 8) term, that » | said court defining an 4 miles northwest of | t are part of a chain extending from the Rockles to the Appalachian. The chain scarcely appears above sthesur- face In Kansas, but rises in the east- ern pars, extends across Missouri through linofs and northern Ken- jtucky, and finally merges into the }Camberland mountalns, In the Ozarks are many caves in which have been found many rellea, such as stone implements and uten-| sils, These caves are supposed to have been the dwelling places of men lin the stone age, and possibly of the “mound builders,” Near Death in Big Pond. Is was a vhrilling experience to Mrs. Ida Soper to face death. “For years a severe lung trouble gave me Intense suffering,’ she writes, “and several times nearly caused my deash, All remedies fatled and doc- sors sald I was incurable. Then Dr, King’s New Discovery brought quick relief and a cure so permanent thas | have not been troubled tn twelve years.” Mrs, Soper Hves in Big Pond, Pa. It works wonders in coughs and colds, sore lungs, hemor- rhages, lagrippe, asthma, croup, whooping cough and all bronchial affections. 50e and $1.00. Trial bottle free. Guaranteed by F. 'T. Clay Psycology of a Name. Monroe County Appeal: Parents should understand that the boy with the wrong sort of name is as badly handicapped as & dog witha tin can to {ts tall, for 16 is an undis- puted fact that the mind fa as cer- tainly affected by what it constantly hears as is the rock upon which drops of water constantly fall. You can keep on telling o harum scarum youth that he fs a gentleman, until he believes he is @ gentleman and wants to act ike agentleman, The reverse is also true. Think then, ye fond parents, of the demoralizing possibllittes of Buddle or Wille or Sammie, or @ thousand other ab- surdities of the same sort when ap- plied to @ healthy boy. As he grows {nto manhood he bears his ridiculous ‘angement, if taken before the stage fents sre all harmless, and can be obtained at a small cost from any good prescription pharmacy, or the mixture would be put up {fasked to do 80. did results, he could see no reason | why 1 would not be a splendid rem- edy for kidney and urinary troubles | and backache, as {t has a peculiar action upon the kidney structure, | cleansing these moet important or- gans and helping them to sift and filter from the blood the foul acids and waste matter which causes sick ness and suffering, Those of our readers who suffer can make no mis- take In giving {ta trial. A Swiss Way. Washington Herald, | Franz Dolder of Berne, Switzerland, | who is making a tour of the United | States, has.some very original views on the prohibition question, He sug- geated that Ifthe prohibition advo- | cates in this country would imitate | their Swiss brethren the qause prob- ably would gain adherettta._ Oyen | among the saloon keepers. La wx- planation of his views he said a min {eter of the Gospel in Kletigan, a rich winegrowlng country, made an agree ment with asaloon keeper that he (the minister) would once a week visit the saloon and take his meur- ure, provided the boniface would go to the ministers church on Sundays and grace the divine service, “The presence of the minister in the saloon, where he takes his litsle drink with other citizens of the town”, said Mr. Dolder. “has a bene- ficlal effect on the guests, while the saloon keeper paying close attention to the preacher’s sermons will no doubt also profit. There ts profit on both sides.” English Spavin Liniment removes Hard, Soft or Calloused | Lumps and Blemishes from horses; also Blood Spavins, Curbs, Splints, | He further stated that while | this prescription is often prescribed | in rheumatio afflictions with splen- | § session of said property and sell the same for eatisfaction of said debt and costs; And whereas, default has pade in pay- ad the under- d property as Ortgage. Now there! » notice is hereby given that the undersigned Will, on Saturday, the Srd day of April, 1009, the east door of the court house In But ssouri, sell the property aforesaid at } auction to the highest bidder for cash, to f debt, costs and i ing said property, Wedt | Prov at M Order of Publication, STATE OF MISSOURI, ) Tr, ¢, be rendered ace or device from said Joseph C, White, de- i, who once had s deed of convey sauce for purporting to convey to sald , the fee simple title to said hatever claim or interest in real estate was so takem and acquired by said Joseph C. White wae not, by him, convey- ed ¥ person, eo far as disclosed by the records of Bates county, Missouri, and such unknown persons would have, by Inheritance or devise, such interest as a A have been ao- quired and held by said Joseph C White, by virtue of the aforementioned conveyance, but such Interest can not be more ¢| Sically de- seribed herein, by the plaintiff or the respec- tive rights of the said unknown defendants be more particularly described or ses forth, be esuse the exact interest of said Joseph C, White therein and the number of the sald un- known persons or their relationship to their | ancestor aforesaid, or how their interest, if any, was acquired, whether by devise or in- it is ordered by the court. id defendants be notified by lication plaintiff bas commenced a against them the object and general nature of ich is to obtain ‘os acd decree of determining the respece e rights and interests of the parties plaintiff? and defendant in and to the following deecrib- ed real estate, lying and being situate in Bates county, Missouri, to-wit: The east half of lot four (4) of the northeast quarter of section two (2) of township thirty-nine (39), of range thirty (30) in sald county, The plaintif claiming to own the fee omen tithe in and to said land, and by sald judgment and decree to define, quiet and set the title of sald plainti to said real es! at unless the said dee fendants be and appear at this court, atthe next term thereof, to be begun and holden at the court house in the city of Butler, in said county. on the tirst Monday in May 1909, before the firet day of said term, plead to the petition in said cause, me will be taken as confessed, and judgment will rilingly And it is further ordered, that a copyhereof be published, according to law, in Tug Borter Weeky Tinks, a newspaper published in said county of Bates for four weeks successively, published at least once a week, the Inst inser tion to be at least thirty days before the first day of said next May term of this court. T. D. EMBREE, Circuit Clerk, A true copy from the record. Witness my hand and seal of the & 88. [seat] Cirenit Court of Bat county. Mis- County «f Bates, souri, this 8th day of March, 1909 In the Cireult Court of Kates County, Missouri, Wedt t. D, EMBREK, Circuit Clerk Febroary term 1000 returnable to the May term 108, . Order of Publication. Order of Publication STA J. A, Beard, Plaintit, va. Etta Crawford, Oscar Garst, 1 Givan Gibson, Elizebeth Whitt, if living and | if deceased then the unknown widower, heirs | at law or devisees of sald Elizabeth Whitt, | deceased, Uream Beghtol, if living and if deceased, th the unknown widow, heirs atiaw or devisees of Uream Beghtol, de evased, John M, Price, if living and if deceased, the unknown widow, heirs ay law or devisees of John M, Price, deceased, John Meador, if living and if deceased, the unknown widow, heire al law or devisees of said john Meador, dee nd, John W, Medor, if living and if deceased, the unknown widow, heirs at law or devisees of John W, Medor, deceased, Elijah K, Vaden, if living and if deceased, the unknown widow, heirs at law or devisees of Elijah KB. Vaden, de 1, Joseph C, White, if living and if the un: known widow, beirs at pa of the said Joseph C.’ White, deceased, and Andrew P, Gibson, executor of the last will of Isham Gibson, deceased, Defendats, Now at this day comes the plaintit, 7 | Beard, and dles herein rt tition, under ’ alleging, among ovher things that defendant Andrew bson, Daniel 1. Gibson, Charles K. Gibso r Garet, Glyan Gibaon, Kliza- beth Whitt, Cream Beghtol, Jona M’ Price, John Meador, John W, Medor, Elijah K, Vaden and Joseph C, White are non-residents of the state of Missouri and further alleging plaintiff states that he verily believes there are persone interested in the subject matter of this | petition whose names he can not insert herein ecanse the same are to him unknown. That some of said unknown persons are the widower, helre at law or devisees of defendant | Elizabeth Whitt, if she 1s deceased, and derive such interestas they may have in the subj | matter of this suit, through the said El h | Whitt, deceased, who was one of the law of Isham Gibson, « ing said real estate In fe by | | will to provide for the conveyance o Teal estate, by a power thas was and is vague and uncertain and under which power the executor of said Isham Gibson, did attempt to convey | said real estate, that by reason of the vagueness of the will of Isham Gibson and the uncer- tainty of the authority of the executor to con- | vey the real estate an appearant legal interest in the real estate aforesaid passed to the said | Elizabeth Whitt as an heir at law of said Isham | Gibson, wn deceased, and through her to her| | widower, heirs at law or devisees, unknown defendants herein, but the respective interests of such unknown defendants severally in and | to said real estate can not be more specifically | set forth or described by this plaintil, because | the number of persons, 60 interested, their re- F MISSOURI, ) 38. County of Bates, In the Clreult Court, February term, sa va G, W, D’Mint, Defendant. Order of Publication, returnable to May 1909 term Now at this day comes the plaintiff herein, by his attorneys and files herein his petition and affidavit, alleging, among other things that defendant, G. W. D’Mint Is a non-resi+ dent of the state of Missouri; Whereupon, it is ordered by the court, in term, that’ said defendant be notified by publication that plaintif has commenced a sult against himin this court, the object and gens eral nature of which is to obtain a judgment for the sur of thirty-two hundred dollars for hisdebt and damages, together with costs of this sult, an? also to sustain an attachment sued and leyled on a certain stock gf merch dise consisting of hardware, cutlery, pal A oils, brushes and such other articles ofmerchan- dise as ie usually kept for sale in a stock of hardware for re trade, eaid stock being the samme heretofor longing to the plaintiff and vonve) ed or transfered to the defendant in exe change for real estate, together with such goods, wares and merchandise as may have been added to sald stock since, the transfer ag aforesaid and now constituting a part thereof, and that unless the sald defendant be and ap- pene at this court, at the next term thereof, to ve begun and holden at, the court house in the city of Butler, in said county, on the first Monday in May, 19, and on or before the dret day of sald term, answer or plead to the peti+ tion in said cause, the same will be taken ag confessed, and judgment will be rendered ace cordingly. And it is further ordered, that a copy hereof be published, according to law, in Tuk Butter WEKKLY Tim newspaper published in said county of Bates for four weeks successively, publishe! at least once @ w the last inser- tion to be at least thirty oy before the fret day of said next May term of this court, T, D, EMBREK, Circuit Clerk, Atrue copy from the record, Witness my hand, and seal of the Clreult Court of (SEAL) ane county, this 8th day of March, 90, T. D. EMBREE, C it Clerk, 20-4 Sweeney, Ring Bone, Stifles, Sprains, | Swollen Throats, Coughs, etc. Save | $50 by uve of one bottle. A wonder ful Blemish Cure. Sold by Frank T. Clay, Druggist. 50-6m Has Handled 3,000,000 Calves. Lester Wolf owner of the Wolf Stock Farm near Grain Valley, and | who has been a dealertn calves at | name day in and day out, until he begins to feel that he {s only an aged infant and loses ambition to attain to higher things. The fact that great men almost invariably bear plain, substantial names ought to convince you that In hitching an ab- surd one to your boy you are start- {ng him upon Iife’s race-course with & handicap that will be hard toover- come, The Lurid Glow of Doom was seen in the red face, hands and body of the little son of H. M. Adams, of Henrietta, Ps. His awful plight from eczewa had, for five years, defied all remedies and baffled the best doctors, who sald the poisoned blood had affected his lungs and nothing could save him. “But,” writes his mother, “seven bottles of Electric Bitters completely cured him.” For eruptions, eczema, salt rheum, sores and all blood dis- orders and Rheumatiem Electric Bit- ters ig supreme. Only 50c. Guar- anteed by F. T. Clay. An Honest Lawyer. In these days when so many law- yers stand ready to accept a retain- er on elther side and to present an argument in favor of any proposl- tion ,it{s refreshing to find a man who {s willing to resign an office rather than enter upon a criminal prosecution which he believes to be — and dangerous to the! siclan, 1 was just about ready to give | - lespair, I 1 ad- Mr. Joseph B. Kealing, who resign- | erttied - alan sae . ed the office of United States district and it has done more good for attorney rather than prosecute in ™e than all other means combined. It the government libel suit, acted well. | pg hg My sy ay Mr. Kealing would have found {t em-' younger, and am able to posses fi my barraseing to have remained in office | work again as usual.” Job Jeavons, with the libel suit on his docket and, ; 1086 Lind street, Wheeling, W. Va. plainly, he is not the sort of man - rooney da ware caer Gee who could have made an argument |; yor] +" ‘aaahene in favor of that unjust cause. | soebaapben sin on blood-making and -building ele- A word of advice to Mr. Taft: In-' ments of cod eer but no oil. struct your attorney general to die-| ~-Vinol-is--unexcelied-as-a strength miss these proceedings against the *reator for old people, delicate children, New York World and the Indlan- giynssg—end is tea bat ae od apolis News. Everything !s to be e@y tor coughs, eolds and bronchitis, the stock yards at Kansas City for | 20 years, has sold out his business. Mr. Wolf was considered the bosgscalt | buyer of the United States and ac- | cording to bis statement he has bought and sold over three million | calves during his business career. | And the greater part of the time has! dictated the price that countrymen | recelved and the packer pald. He) traded in all kinds of cattle that welghed 500 pounds or less. Mr.| Wolf came to Kansas City direct from Germany in 1885 and I!vestock | dealers say that he has bought more | calves than any other man fn the) United States. He will engage in! another branch of the live stock | trade. HAD QUIT WORK | READY TO GIVE UP IN DESPAIR | Restored to Health By Vinol | “I was sick, run-down and finally had to give up work. After trying & number of remedies and several phy- gained by dismissal; much is tobe ‘We retura your money if Vinol fails | 7°"S lost by continuing @ proceeding % give satisfaction. which {fs bound to terminate in a FRANK T, CLAY, Droggist farce.—Commoner. Butler, Mo. spective degree of relationship to thetr said | westor, Or Whether they take and hold by in | ritance or devise ts to thie plaintit wholly | | unknown, That other unknown persons are the widows, | heirs at law or devisees of Uream Beghtol, if! he is deceased, who once owneu the real estate herein above described, in tee, and who never convey: d the same to any person, by a proper- ly executed conveyance, anc they derive such interest as they may Pave in said real estate by inheritance or devise from said Uream Begh- tol, deceased, that subject to the right of this pases, such interest would be the legal title in fee, in and to said real estate, but ihe re- spective interests of said unknown persons so | claiming, can not be more specifically set forth, because their respective degrees of relation- ship tothetr said ancestor, deceased, and the number 80 interested is wholly unknown to this plaintif’, Other unknown persons are t! low. heirs at law or devisees of John M. Price, deceased, i he is deceased and derive such interest as the: may have in the oubject matter of this suit, by inheritance or deyise from aaid John M. Price, deceased, whoat one time held an imperfectly executed deed of conveyance, for the said real estate, purporting to convey to said John M, Price the fee simple title thereto, ‘id Price not having conveyed the real estate to any one | by properly execated deed of conveyance, but the interest of said unknown detendanta, so in- terested, can not be more specifically describ- ed or set forth herein because the same is to plaintiff unknown, and the respective intereste or shares of said unknown defendants and the number 80 interested and their degree of rela- tionship to their ancestor, John M. Price, is not known to plaintiff. Other unknown person, who may be inter- ested inthe subject matter of this action are the unknown widow, heirs at law or devisees of John Meador, if he ie deceased, and derive such interest as they may have in the subject matter of this action, by inheritance or devise, from said John Meador, who once held an perfectly executed conveyance for said laid purporting to convey a fee simple title thereto the sald John Meador not having conveyed sald real estate to any person so far as shown by the record in the office of the Recorder of Deeds in and for Bates county, Missouri, but the inter- est, if any, of the unknown defendants, so in terested, can not be more specifically set :orth or described, herein because the same is to plaintiff unknown, and the respective interests or shares of said unknown defendants are un- known to plaintiff, because the number of per- sone 80 interested and their respective degree of relationship to said ancestor, John Meador, is to plaintiff anknown. ‘bat other unknown person, who may be in- terested in the subject matter of this action are the unknown widow, heirs at law or devisees of John W. Medor, deceased, if he is deceased, and derive their interest, if any therein, by in- heritance, er devise from said John W. Medor, who once appeared to have claimed some right, title or interest In and to said land, the exact nature and extent of which plaintiff can not de- termine, and whatever such interest may have been, wae not conveyed to any person by a properly executed deed of conveyance, and such un} nown persons would have, ance or devise such interest as held or owned, by said John W, Medor, de- ceased, but such interest can not be more epe- | elfically set forth or described herein. That other unknown persons, who may be in- terested in the subject matter of this action are the unknown widow, heirs at law or devisees of Elijah E. Vaden, if he is deceased, and derive their interest, if any therein, by inheritance or devise from said Elijah E. Vaden, deceased who once held a deed of conveyance for said realestate, purporting to convey to him the fee simple title thereto, and whatever claims or was 60 held by said Elijah K. Vaden, was not by him conveyed to any person so far 8 disclosed by the records of Seen eat wid of Ji C. White, if he is deceased derive 1» Who interest, if any therein, by laber- f| Trains South (No.2 MOUNTAIN | Missouri Pacific Time Table BUTLER STATION yo TIME CARD EFFECTIVE Nov, 8, 1908, | Trains ss ba 206... ae 208 21 2 are K. C, Stock Local Freight | “ aw 4 Local Freight| 291. H West, departs | Interstate East, arrives... | The Missourl Pacific have through |package car service which delivers | merchandise from New York in But ‘ler on the fifth morning out, fourth morning delivery from Cincinnati and Cleveland, third morning from | Indianapolis and Chicago, second |morning from St. Louis. Will be | glad to furnish you routeing orders which will {neure quick time. |Low One Way Colonist Rates, | To points in Arizona, British Colum- | bia, Colorado, Idaho, Mexico, Mon- tana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, | Texas, Utah and Washington, fare | greatly reduced through services op- erated over the Missouri Pacific via ‘Pueblo and the Scenic Route, The Denver & Rio Grande. If you are at Office or write me Iwill be glad to assist you. E. U. VANDERVOORT. Agent, 60 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE contemplating a trip West les me figure with you to-day. I can a you time, trouble and money. Cal ¥ ae Sa Iv ee Oo} Mike F ecrib ru Mck Jus dut, ried thie one vii and dau Fr his ‘dea 187 tie | dret the |} Ad Mei wit J sas R duc c her om T