The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, November 18, 1909, Page 2

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Resolutions. Nov. 3, 1909, therefore; | the Federal Court here, because Payne his family has lost a devoted |Tebo & Neosho Railway, which son and brother the Lodge a faithful | never built. Resolved, That we will ever bear|the railroad would be ~built Resolved, That we tender our heart- | est. ords and an engrossed copy sent to | fused to obey the court’s orders B. F. Kenney. | lar salary while in jail. FARMERS BANK OF BATES COUNTY. Copttal © 60,000 00 We are protected against robbery by insurance and our large CORLISS SAFE, guaranteed by the manufacturer to be Burglar Proof. DIRECTORS: E. A. Bennett, Clark Wix, J. J. McKee, Homer Duvall, Frank Holland, J. W. Choate, F. N. Drennan, O. A. Heinlein, W. F. Duvall. WE WANT YOUR SUSINESS. E. A. Bennett, President, Homer Duvall, Cashier, W. F. Duvall, Vice-Pres., H. H. Lisle, Asst. Cashier | DUVALL-PERCIVAL TRUST CO. CASH CAPITAL, $50,000. FARMERS BANK BUILDING, BUTLER, MO. We have money to loan on real estate at a low rate F arm Loans of interest with privilege to pay at any time. 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, securing you Investments reasonable interest on ond cori. We pated interest on time deposits. W. F. DUVALL, President, J. B. DUVALL, Vice-President, Arthur Duvall, Treasurer. W. D. Yates, Title Examiner. C. E. ROBBINS AUCTIONEER Will cry sales any where. Live Stock and Farm Sales a specialty. Graduate of the two best auction schools in the World. President of the Missouri State and Vice-President of the International auctioneers associations. Made 143 sales the past season, in 8 different counties. I cover more territory than all the auctioneers in Bates county combined, and can give your sale bills a wider circulation. If you had a member of your family very sick, or if you had a.case in court where all your savings were at stake, would you hire an old quack doctor to attend their wants? or an old petty- fogging lawyer to look after your interests? No, you would cer- tainly employ the best physician or the best attorney available. The same rule should hold good in the hiring of an auctioneér, as he is your agent on sale day and you have little to say asto how your earnings shall be disposed of. It always pays to hire the best. My terms are reasonable. Send for tree circular on how to ar- tangeforasale, # : On of address me at Amorét, Mo: Dates made at this ‘ office. Phone 36, Wire at my expense. j 5 i ; i | $552,000 Against St.ClairCounty) FARM FURROWS. Whereas, It pleased the Supreme! Kansas City, Mo., Nov. 15.— A Eighteen hens that were fed milk Architect of the Universe to call from ard J. Burke, a New York capitalist! An editor friend of mine who be- U last winter, laid more eggs than 100! labor to rest our dearly beloved |-was awarded a judgment of $552,000) tieves that to-day isn’t half as good as ' Brother Travis S. Payne, who died against St. Clair county, Missouri, in| the times gone by is responsible for Resolved, That in the death of Bro. | county in 1870 floated bonds for the| most apple butter is that it is prepar- and useful member and the commu-| When the bonds were issued the|/apples charged to the eyelids with nity an upright and honored citizen. [officers of St. Clair county thought/bow-legged cutworms make the in grateful remembrance the zeal and | Burke owned about $200,000 of the|seen apple butter made in this way fidelity with which Bro. Payne dis-|county’s bond issuance and after) grow so strong and chesty that it charged all his Masonic duties, will| hearing the history of the case the/ would rise up in the stilly night and try toimitate his devotion tothe grand | court held he was entitled toa judg-|defythe whole family. This kind of principles of our fraternity. | ment for the full amount with inter- apple butter will put fat on a hoop ' felt sympathy to the bereaved family' The controversy over the St. Clair} and recommend them to the care of County Railroad case has caused end- that God whom Bro. Payne served | less litigation. All the power of the} and in whom he trusted. United States courts was used in an| Resolved, That a copy of these res- | effort to collect from the county. The olutions be spread upon our our rec- ple elected county judges who re- the family of our deceased brother. | more than fifteen county judges serv- | If I do the chores and get out seventy ne G. S. Porter, ed jail sentences for contempt of | bushels a day, I feel that am doing L. A. Beaman, ‘court. The men received their regu-| fairly well. a The Poultry Yard. Ben- | Farmer end Stockman fed on cut bone and meat. that the following: ““The trouble with the | Scrofula disfigures and i: which chills the birds in spots wasled with too much care. The pure causes life-long misery. | holes, and produces bad colds. Ahen too fat gets lazy; she takes no interest in life. One too poor cares nothing about her egg record. The happy medium is a happy hen. lh Some people are willing to pay an extra price fore eggs of one color. Many people geta cent or morea dozen for sorting their hen fruit ac- cording to size and color. On some farms the young chickens Children become strong and lively when food law hasruined it Windfall Mr. | finest kind of apple butter. We have skirt. Tam trying to build up my health so as to withstand the shock when someone announces that he has husk- ed 150 bushels in ten hours. Nice fall weather is always very favorable to and |the propagation of these big stories. the summer and fall. They should at once be trained to winter quarters; and the sooner this is done the better. than two grumpy ones. A happy hen FOR SALE BY ALL, DRUGGISTS is the one that fattens the pocket- : book; a hen with a grouch isn’t worth The day has gone by in thecorn Senmeslad segens pe eat aan her space, no matter what her breed belt when a man can afford to letan old pasture or meadow get sod-bound cout tyes eahon Sas while to remember that an earth floor and om Such meadows and pas-| is unhealthful’ when the location is tures should be run over early in the | cided to have one every year here-| naturally wet and not well drained. mu | eae cat dete Song la few days away from his work as/to put in a board floor. ed. If this is done it will double the | Well as anyone. Hens will not lay during the cold producing power of such fields. Some men claim they can put up a| months by given ae ps in n oge goood straw pile with a wind stacker. | material. I feed wheat and skim-milk, Bi a canes iy aa || do nck danke the wrath of tr state-| Wilh” Sew’ iplenlld’ aah deebatig what you might call perfectly safe. 1) ments, but none of these men have] foods; and also include parched corn own one of that kind, but he has not |©Ver been around our neighborhood |and kafir-corn in the bill of fare. run away for several years, though | during the thrashing season. Take no chances by having too last year he came very nearly doing, Shredded corn fodder may not just| many chickens together in one flock. 80, as the result of a neighbor march-| answer to the specifications of the|If you see they are getting to be ing up through the corn field when I! feed experts, but that will not pre-|crowded in their winter quarters, was husking corn. | vent me from having a nice quantity |make thrift and health a certainty by I know a fellow who loafs around | °! it set aside to furnish our stock| dividing them up, or selling some of and scarcely earns enough to keep/| With bedding. them. his family in bread and butter, simply| One of my dairyman friends put up} You may have an idea that poultry because he is the direct heir, of ana pair of stave silos this year and en-|canhunt their own grit. You are uncle who owns two sections of good | closed the two in a board shed. With|wrong. Grit is as essential as feed: land. His conduct reminds me a) this enclosure he hopes to protect his|Get a grit box, fill it with crushed little of the man who was drawn into| silos from the summer winds and rock and oyster-shell, and hang it on a lawsuit after his father’s death, and | heat and at the same time keep his|the wall where dirt will not be who, during the course of the court| silage from freezing as much as it| scratched into it. © |proceedings, made this remark: “I| would were the silos exposed to the : sometimes wish that father hada’t| winter weather. Then, to, his shed| iat winter 6 not tev off There eid died.”” ; forms an approach to the silo doors) he » number of very nice days this On our farm we are on the outlook | thereby doing away with the little month, and advantage should be tak- for good ears of corn all the time, | Cubby holes commonly used. en of good weather. for repairing th anda strange thing occurred last allt etic tdel = Spe . nmy,"® week. I started in one morning and $100 Reward, $100. whatever work might be necessary the very first ear I picked was the} The readers of this paper will be| before real winter comes. best one I have found so far this year | pleased to learn that there is at least One of the best methods of keeping and I very much doubt if I can find|one dreaded disease that science has " the equal of it been able to cure in all its stages, and | ‘he poultry house warm in winter at g that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure| small cost, is to keep the floor’ well One of my friends claims that he | is the only pene cure now known |littered with dirt, cut straw, hay or has positive proof to show that tur-/to the medical fraternity. Catarrh|Jeaves to the depth of from three to keys are the cause of more than half | being aconstitutional disease bg six inches, This protects against loss of the neighborhood rows. I am well pave ay joo har eeenalie: act-|Of heat and prevents cold currents aware that the pesky things do insist i ing directly upon. the blood and mu-|from below, and may also be used to upon sampling all the tomatoes, fruit} cous surfaces of the system, thereby | scatter the grain in to keep the fowls may be. SCOTT & BOWNE, 409 Peart Se.N.¥. 9! It is worth the poultry raiser’s giving the patient strength this is no subject to discuss at this by building up the constitution and Journal. season of the year. It will be out of assisting nature is doing its work. iy Sanuhee een order in our home until 2:30 p. m. on | The proprietors have so oak —_ in Forced Into Exile. N ber 25th. its curative powers ey offer me pct Dollars for any case} Wm. Upchurch, of Glen Oak, Okla. Now they tell us that the bluish-| that it fails to cure. Send for list of | was an guile from home. Mountain green streaks in Roquefort cheese | testimonials. Addre: air, he _ would cure a - are nothing élee Pegg oe ame F. J. CHENEY & €O., fal igng-tacking Soe that had def Fj | Toledo, O. | ed all remedies for two Afte: which has taken two months to form | Sold by druggists, 75c. six months he retu death dog- and ripen. That’s one time when) Fle Mare Family Pills for con-|ging his steps. ‘Then I began to man’s ingenuity over-reached my |stipation. use Dr. as New Discovery,” he appetite. American cheese will be | —— writes, a after taking six bottles I good enough for me hereafter. |Farmers’ Short Course at Co-|2™ 28 well a3 ever.”’ It saves thou- | sands yearly from desperate. lung dis- Speaking about vacation I have de- | lumbia. Infallible for coughs and ae ‘ bi Shostiite ai For the first time in the history of | throat. ronchitis, hem- te college of Agizlture, there wi a sfc tone 4, Fen- | be given this year, a Farmers’ Short > <2°°S| Course of Instruction in Agriculture. °°” guaran by Fe. Gy , | A regular course of instruction begin- ning Tuesday, December 28th, and continuing for four days will be of-|_. fered to the farmers who will. be in are allowed to roost outdoors during | | I should rather have one happy hen | after. I find that a farmer can enjoy | With this kind of location it will ‘pay | (; ins i i destroying the foundation of the dis-|. tive — wrap and grains in the neighborhood, but ber | active—From November Farm colds, it dispels hoarseness and sore | teeth A flock might justas well roost in | trees as in a house full of cracks and | Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Vienna, W. Va.— “I fool that I owe the hes tenvele ae women to take Lydia E, Vegetable Compound.” — WHEAT Vi for the est num! of female diseases of cine in the country, ousands of voluntary testimonials are on file in Mass., from women who have cured from almost every form ‘of female complaints, inflammation, ul- ceration, displacements, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, indigestion and nervous prostration. If you would like special advice ibout your case write a confiden- tial letter to Mrs. Pinkham, at luyynn, Mass. Her advice is free, and always helpful. : Womanly Wisdom. With a broom straw pierce your cake When you think it’s done enough. If the straw gets sticky rough You must longer bake. If it comes out clean and neat, Then the cake is fit to eat, When roasting a turkey stuff the breast with pared sweet potatoes. They get fine flavor from the juices. Have an old leather mitten to slip on your hand while scouring the top of the stove and you will not be When a cake recipe calls for two use one egg and sift one tablespoon- ful of cornstarch with the flour. You may sometimes think that mother isa little old-fashioned, but after a while you. will acknowledge that she is the best advisor you have ever had. When you must go out in the rain your ankles above the shoe tops in paper, draw the stockings up over it and the dampness will not pene- trate it. Do.not throw away your leaky rub- ber hot water-bags. Get some clean sand, heat it in a tin pan and pour in- to the bag by means of a funnel. The T) sand keeps its heat as well as water. Just a little nick out. of the enamel of a tooth made by cracking a hut in the mouth, may spoil a tooth forever. When you have nuts to crack use a hammer or a nutcracker and save the

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