The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, August 26, 1909, Page 6

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No other medicine for woman’s ills has any such professional endorsement as Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription has received, in the unqualified recommendation of each of ‘its several ingredients by scores of leading medical men of all the schools of practice. Is such an endorsement not worthy of your consideration? Is it not a significant fact too that Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription Is the only medicine sold through druggists, for woman’s peculiar weaks nesses and ills, the makers of which are not afraid to print its every in- gredient on its outside wrapper? Is this not worthy of your consideration j if you are a poor sick invalid woman? = The formula of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription will bear the most critical examination of medical ex- \ perts, for it contains no alcohol, narcotics, harmful, or habit-forming drugs, and no agent enters into it \ that is not highly recommended by the most advanced and leading medical teachers and authorities of their several schools of practice. These authorities recommend the ingredients of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescrip- ‘ tion for the cure of exactly the same ailments for which this world-famed medicine is advised. SY A booklet of ingredients, with numerous authorative professional endorsements by the leading medical authorities of this country, will be mailed free to any one sending name and address with request for same. Address Dr. .R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. It’s foolish—often dangerous to accept a substitute of unknown composition in place of this time-tried medicine of known composition. Don’t do it. Insist on getting what you ask for. A Good Investment, Building material is now cheaper than it has been before in years, respective interests of such unknown cannot be more epeci ily deser! forth herein and imber of persons so in teresved w er the y take by inh or devise and their respective de; to said ances! Order of Publication. STATE OF MISSOURI } 4g County of Bates, | In the Cirenult Court, October term, 1909, vacation July 16th, 1900. J.D, Muda and Nancy J. Mudd, plaintiffs, against | The unknown heirs at law of Wm. R. Hut, deceased; The unknown hens at law of J leceased; ‘Ihe unkno beth Roach, deceased; The law. of Ktizabeth Mudd Benjamin Vanhorn, if living and then the unknown widow, heirs at law or devisees of said Benjamin Me es gry enson, if living if the unknown widow, heirs it is ordered eal be ffs have commenced a suit rt, the object and gen me ja to submit to the court sel in Bates county, Missourt, to-wi north nd the north hal itheart qui south half of the northeast quarter, and BUT résponsible parties tell us that LUMBER, SHINGLES AND CEMENT is going to advance in PRICES, They claim this is caused by the renued ac- tivity in Railroad construction and building in general. We advise you to buy NOW. A BARN, A HOUSE or A CORN CRIB bought now will be a good investment and will make you good interest. A , ‘J Holl, Wm. T. Mudd, anne tisk: fuel Mudd, David Roach, Henr, Thomas Roach, Mary Walker an James T. Beatie, D fendante. thie day come the oger herein by tition, under od file their hy ings that the det . f living, Bei nborn, if living, William Pege, Jal Bunting and James T. Batie are not reside: | of the State of Missouri, and further alleging that they verily believe there are persons iu- | terested in the subject matter of the petition, | whose nawes they can not insert therein be- }eause they are unknown to the pisintiffe, that the respective Interests of euch unknown per- how derived, 6) far as known tu the re as alleged in the petition, and a8 we, to-wit: ‘That prior to February om, 1871, Wm, R. ie | Hurt died owning in fee simple the south half | of lot one of the northwest quarter id sec- | tion nineteen (19) township forty-two (42) of | | range thirty-two (32), Bates county, Missvari = is hereinaiter ibed, and on said date | | plaintiffs parc! said real eatate and too! eed of couve: , therefor, from the sare . BUTLER, M SSOURI. undivided one-half interest only) section teen (19) also the theast quarter of the east quarter of ty (80) and the west half of the northwest qui ter of section twenty (20), (Save and excep tract of about twelve acres, thereof as follo beginning at the north west corner of said nor west quarter and ranping thence south forty- eight rode; thence east forty rods; thence north forty-eight rods; thence west forty rods to the place of or All of said reat eetate being situated in township forty-iwo of range thirty- ‘Miseoarl: plain- \beolute and fee simple title; and parent adverace claim of the defe in or to the same parts or parcels th that the court may hei 4 ascertain and and interest of the int It is to our interest to advise you right because in the future we want your confidence. So take our advice and buy NOW. which tr ani | ed heirs of R, Hufft, which | recorded in | made to Navia | been and was intended to have been | thie plaintiff Nancy J. Mudd. That was imperfectly executed by some of the grantore therein; that under said deed and ove | of dateFebruery 7th, 1871, purporting tocon- | bs] the title of two of the wore 138 0! said m. | | erg te took , | hav and held the exoiuriv | ae ra thereof since the yei ng title thereto, uover said d { r | reason of the facts BANK pie law or devisees of W Huft, de: OF BATES COUNTY. i 8) fore the first day of said term answer or plead to the petition in said cause, the same will be taken as confessed, and jadgment will be ren- dered accordingly. And itis further ordered, that a copy hereof be published, according tolaw tu Tus Butter WEEKLY Timgs @ newspaper published in said county of Bates for fuur weeks successively, ubdlished at least least once a week, the last insertion to be at least thirty days before the firet day of next term of this court T. D, EMBREE, Cireuit Clerk. A true copy from the record. Witness my hand and geal of the Cir- cuit Court of Bates County, this 8rd day of August, 1%9. T. D EMBREE, 41-4 Cireult Clerk, aforesaid; such heirs at | ceased, appear to have some legal interest in ald realestate derived by inberisance or devise from the svid Wm. R. Hafft, deceased. but ‘he respective interest of such unknown d+fendants can not be more speciiically set forth because} the number of each pera i ° verest if any and their tive degrees of relatiousbip to the sald Wm. R Huff or whevh- er they claim or might claim by inheritance or | devise te to plaintid unknow: | That James Roach, d | known heir | in,) died ini 18—, ownrng in fee the northeast quarter of the northeast quarter, the east forth of the south- | east quarter of the northeast quarter, and the east jorth of the northeast quarter of tne south- wr and she southwest quarter of the quarter and the northwest Are oi alt of {ena} ‘Order of Publication. STATE OF MISSOURI, a. Cornty of Bates. In the Cireuit Court, to- October term, 109, We are protected against robbery by insurance and our large CORLISS SAFE, guaranteed by the manufacturer to be Burglar Proof. hi ‘ofthe southeast quarter and the ea: | the north halt of lot.one of the southwest quar- ter allin section nineteen (19) township und | range aforesaid, hereinafter deacribe . an: left as hie hvire at law, bis widow Ei zabeth Roach, In vacation Augurt 7th, 199, J. V. Tatley, Plaiatif, ve i of which is to obtain a decree of the court, di- vorcing plaintiff from t the grounds, that the | ter the death of saia James Ruach, either by | direct or mesne Conveyance, all their rignt title | and interest ig and to all of sald last above de- WE WANT YOUR SUSINESS. —— je-are imp ial aie _ nd some of bing were lost be- E. A. Bennett, President, W. F. Duvall, Vice-Pres., absented herself reaeonable cause for th space of Y | and that unless the said a1 be aud ap Homer Duvall, Cashier, H. H. Lisle, Asst. Cashier y imperfectty written, t conveyance as al said, for porte and parcels of eaid last above described lands, the suld defenda.te the ux- known heirs at law of James Roach duceased and the unknown heirs at law of Elizibeth Roach deceased and -the unsnown heirs at law of said Blizabe.h Mudd. deceased, sppear to | have some right or taterest in the real estate bov: bed. adv ree to the title of cry B phy er fren! hi said real +s records of, in and for Bates Co anid sexe term the eame being derived by in- some ron “ergata the sald Jam-s Roach, As og decensed, throogh caer att jeceused, or one or the ecossed persons, but the respec- tive interests of said unknown perso ro | claim, ormight claim cannut be mo! fet forth or 1909, and term, day of ——— firet vay of said petition in said cause, confessed, and judgment mercinety. And itis further ordered, that a be pubiie! LER Weexiy Tives, & in said county of Bates DUVALL-PEGIVAL TUST CO. CASH CAPITAL, $50,000. FARMERS BANK BUILDING, BUTLER, MO. We have money to loan on real estate at a | ts Farm Loans of interest with peivilege to pay at ag tne. sail Abstracts We have a complete set of Abstract Books'and will fur- , nish abstracts to any real estate in Bates county and examine and perfect titles to same. We will loan your idle money for you, securi ‘ou Investments reasonable interest on good teag ‘We fey interest on time deposits. W. F. DUVALL, President, ‘Arthur Duvall, Treasurer. bews) for J, B. DUVALL, Vice-President, W. D. Yates, Title Examiner. and set tance 08 Of Tela- r is to the plaintiffs the clerk, in ‘and unknown by publication that them le of plaintiffs in and to the following land he plaintiff herein b DIRECTORS: eee oe ee his ‘petition and afte . “ Tuatthe said El rabeth Mudd died without eg ges things that E. A. Bennett, Clark Wix, J. J. McKee, | Issue on the —— day of 18— andthe s id 'y, 18 @ non-resident of | widow Klizabeth Roach died om jhe —— da, upon it is ordered by the cierk in vaca- Homer Duvall, Frank Holland, J. W. Choate, eure eee other than ¢ salt ‘efendant be noted by publics. E inlei | Th . D. Mudd acquired from jaintiff has commenced a suit against F, N. Drennan, O. A. Heinlein, W. F. Duvall. | sala Minnbate Medd cue’ dilonbecs Kosah et. urt, the bject ant general nature on counting them and found the above 18th day of March 1908 abandoned him and has fr m the plaintia without a ina Tatley be and ap- iF at this court at the next term thereo! to rer house in the eity of Butler, in said county, on the first before ewer or plead tothe same will be taken as will be rendered ac- hereof 4, according to law, in uh Bor. Brees ee +d at least -once a week the ‘Possibilities of Well Farmed Land. It has been said that the average | farmer in this country merely “‘tickles | the soil,” scratches it over a little, so to speak, scatters his grain and is ready to reap. While to our way of thinking farming in the corn belt may seem to be quite intensified, it can- not be disputed that we have yeta great deal to learn in the science of crop handling in order to make use of the maximum producing power of our acres each and every season. In this connection a comparison of | crop production in this and foreign countries furnishes some interesting facts. The following figures give the average production of wheat, rye, | oats, barley and potatoes in Austria, | Belgium, France, Germany, Sweden, Great Britain, the Netherlands and Ireland for the years 1903-04-05 com- pared with the same crops of this country as given in a late census, namely: The average of wheat per | acre in these eight foreign countries in these years was 28.42 bushels as against 12.5 bushels in the United States; rye, 34.5 as against 12.4; oats, 48.56 as against 31.9; barley, 34.9 as| 5,; against 26.8; potatoes, 180.23 as against’93 bushels. This shows an average increase per acre in all of these countries above the average per cent for wheat; 97 per cent for rye; 35.8 per cent for oats; 30 per cent for barley and 93 per cent for pota- toes. d From this data we can get a vivid idea of how far ahead of our methods are those employed in foreign lands. Conditions, of course, are accountable for this difference, land being com- paratively cheap on this side of the water, and, of course, there is not the incentive to the farmer on $50 or $100 an acre land to farm intensively that there is to the farmer on land valued at many times this figure. This leads us to conclude that there are two classes of farmers: one class improves its methods of farming only when the increased cost of produc- tion demands it, and the other class works to improve its methods at all times regardless of influences which may alter the cost of production. Needless to say the activity of the last named class is chiefly responsible for a better agriculture in the broadest sense of the word. For a second time we may conclude that whatever increase in the average production of farm crops is recorded in coming years it will be due to the efforts of those sources which supply knowl- edge and information which practical- ly for the taking, namely, the intel- ligently edited farm paper, the bul- letin, the institute and the short) course.—Farmer & Stockman. Merchant Gets 2,740 Pennies. Mason City, Ia., Aug.—An express | package containing 2,740 pennies is | just now disturbing Merchant Lieb-| bsohn, of Bancroft. The pennies | production of the United States of 127| ; WORTH MOUNTAINS OF GOLD During Change of Life, ‘says Mrs. Chas. Barclay Graniteville, Vt. —‘*I was passin, through the Chapge f Life andsuftered NT rom nervousness andotherannoyin, “| sym) a a and { ‘}can truly say that S Lyaiat. bnkhan's egetable Com. \ has proved -j worth mountains of gold-to me, as it restored my health and strength. [ never em to tell my_ friends what Se REE L peepee ea Vegetable Com has done for me during this trying spate Complete restoration to health means so much to me that for the sake of other suffer. ing women I am willing to make ey le public so you ig publis! his letter.’ —Mnrs. Cuas, BARCLAY, iP. Graniteville, Vt. No other medicine for woman’s ills has received such wide-spread and un- qualified endorsement. No other med. icine we know of has such a record f cures’of female ills ashas Lydia E. 4 am’s Vegetable Compound. yr more than 30-years it has been suring female complaints such as inflammation, ulceration, local weak- nesses, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, indigestion nd nervous prostration, and it is equalled for carrying women safely hrough the period of mn of life, 't costs but little to try Lydia E. Vinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and, as Mrs. Harclay says,it is “worth moun tains of gold” to suffering women, BIG CORN CROP IN DANGER. Rain is Needed at Once to Pre- vent Great Impairment. K. C, Star 18, The 500-million-bushel corn crop which seemed almost assured in Kan- sas and Nebraska on August 1 has been crimpled and shrunken by the excessive heat of the past few days, and absence of adequate rain for two weeks past. Dozens of reports have come to The Star reporting varying degrees of damage. Generally the corn in the eastern part of the state does not appear to be seriously hurt, and some parts even of Central Kan- sas are still hopeful of a full crop, but in Western Kansas and some of the big corn counties in Northern Kansas and Southern Nebraska reports indi- cate that the extreme heat and drought has done great damage to the crop. Tne amount of damage done is impossible to estimate at the pres- ent time. Seared With a Hot Iron, or scalded by. overturned kettle—cut with a knife—bruised by slammed door—injured by gun or in any other way—the thing need ’at once is Buck- came from Dysart, Ia., but there is no way of finding out who the sender | was. He paid 43 cents express and | then put the pail on the floor. When Liebsohn broke the cover, | out rolled pennies in every direction. Clerks and assistants went to work umber, con- | science money, he is not given to tricks of any kind, and he is very anxious now to get even a soothsayer | to explain the mystery. The pennies | have been deposited and will be held | until further developments. Order of Publication. STATE OF MISSOURI, In the Uiiealt Court, 10 Oe ‘Areul 19 October te! "i vacation Auguat 7th, © alessio antes ary K Wilson, Ruth I. Boyde, Amyen Shewo i. Atkeson, Hattle Re ho thee Moberly, i oberly, —" J.D. Banter, pisiatii, vecites Fred @ Barber RB, H. bert Barber, Defendants. pane pore es Now at this day come tl rein, Pa ay Cr ey todo abe etiam 4 amon; things defen ‘ani Fred P. Barber and Al via ae Sat af Ml apn enone ered wl vecation That sald defendants "he notibed by pal jaintifis have ‘sult against them in this court the cbject whieh a of the to partition ardsel’, subject to dower ead of Christina . two ‘Bich len’s Arnica Salve to subdue inflam- mation and kill the pain. It’s earth’s supreme healer, infallible for boils, ulcers, fever sores, eczema and piles. 25c at F. T. Clay’s. Real Estate Transfers. Warranty Deeds. '—R-€ Chappell to Carl Schmidt lots 21 and 22 blk 6 Merwin $500.00. GH Spicer to William R Boag 40 acres sec 24 Mt Pleasant twp $4000. Rebbecca N Cameron to Claude Ma- jors lot s blk 1 Atkinson’s Add Butler $475. F J W Brown to T B Asbury lots 3, 4 and 5 blk 97 Rich Hill $40. Elizabeth Porter to. E W & J H Short 2 1-2 acres sec 5 Pleasant Gap twp $200.00. Mary Meads to Devon Snell lot 10 blk 17 Littles Add Hume $275.00. James H Lamasney to Abe and S White 85 acres sec 31 Elkhart twp $3500.00. ’ EC Davidson to James W Bailey :|52 acres sec 23 East Boone twp $1000.00. x James W Bailey to E C Davidson 52 acres sec 23 East Boone twp $1000.00, - : HE Morse to} Daniel W Kile lot 7 hd Recue a ‘ . Browning to Amanda Durs 40 a sec 3 Charlotte twp $1. James Rupe to Barney 0. Koegt et al 305 a secs 11 and 6: East Boote twp $4784.”

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