The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, May 5, 1910, Page 5

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of its capital stock, or $25,000.00. money, and the banking institution that is making E. A. BENNETT, President W. F. DUVALL, Vice-President ~ 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 | Farm Loans of interest with privilege to pay at any time. Abstracts We have a complete set of Abstract Books and will fur- Farmers Bank Surplus Fund has Reached One Haili its Capital Stock ESIDES paying its regular dividends, the Farmers Bank has continued to set aside a portion of its yearly earnings toa surplus fund and at present the surplus fund is equal to one half A bank, in order to be in a first class condition, must make tinually becoming stronger and of greater value to its customers. WE WANT YOUR BUSINESS HOMER DUVALL, Cashier H. H. LISLE, Asst. Cashier | Novel Cement House. Experiments by College of Agri- | culture Prove Mixed Diet Su- perior to Corn Alone. | Inarecent bulletin the College of Agriculture of Missouri has publish- jed the results of a number of swine feeding experiments, by E. B. For- | bes. These experiments prove that corn | —good —is a good feed fj CAPITAL STOCK... ..$50,000.00 STOCK........ $50,000.00 Mower and that aunts is petty : SURPLUS FUND.......... $25,000.00 | withholding it from any animal need- jing food. At the same time, it is |shown that corn alone is not nearly |so good or so profitable a feed as corn supplemented by some proteid | food such as tankage, linseed oilmeal or soy beans. In hogs fed exclusively on corn the animal becomes very fat and chubby and does not develop properly; the | bones are brittle and easily broken, | Sixty-five hogs were used in this experiment, and they were divided into lots of five each. Two different |rations were used with corn alone in ‘two of them and corn supplemented | with some other feed in the others. | The hogs fed on corn and linseed oilmeal and those fed on corn and j\tankage gained the most; those re- jceiving corn alone were most unsat- isfactory. A full account of this work, ‘The Effect of Rations on the Development |of Swine,” may be obtained free by writing for Bulletin No, 81 to F. B. Mumford, Director of Agricultural Experiment Station, Columbia, Mis- souri. The Ladies’ Aid Society. We've put a fine addition to the good old church at home; money is con- In Belfast, Me., there is a house, | built by Frank Hoag, believed by the | builder and citizens of that place to |be the only one of the kind on earth. Aside from the ballasting and dig- | ging for the cellar, the house was | built by Mr. Hoag himself. The en- | tire outside is of cement, the mixing It’s just the latest kilter with a gal- {of the component parts being under- lery and dome. | 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 good security. We pay interest on time deposits. W. F. DUVALL, President, Arthur Duvall, Treasurer. J. B. DUVALL, Vice-President, W. D. Yates, Title Examiner. IT IS NO SECRET! It is plain to be seen why the PEOPLES BANK CONTINUES TO GROW 1st—Its officers are men who have been tried long in positions of trust. They have prov- en themselves to be conservative and economical. 2nd—It has a board of directors composed of seventeen successful farmers and business men. 83rd—It prohibits the loaning of its funds to its officers and employees. 4th—It has for the convenience of its friends and patrons a daily live stock market re- port. 5th—It gives to its patrons without cost the protection afforded by one of the latest burglar proof safes. 6th—It always has ample funds to loan to de- serving borrowers. 7th—It is (in fact) ‘‘A Bank on which you can Always Bank.” Mares, & Fillies For Sale All registered stock I invite inspection of this stock, as it will com- pare with any of the kind in the United States. All of my horses are bred from import- . ed stock and are top notchers. if you buy from home parties you always have a recourse if it is not as represented. Farm three miles notheast of Butler. Telephone 4 on 125. Percheron Stallions, HESS DRUG STORE The Rexall Store The Chi-Nam-El Store The Eastman Kodak Store ‘The Lowney’s Candy Store The Lee’s Incubator and Stock Remedy Store ‘The Prescription Drug Store |ject. Mr. Hoag finished the inside church in all the town! | of the house first. This being done, And when twas dedicated, why we he lathed the whole outside with wire | planked ten thousand down; screen stuff, such as is used for fenc- | That is, we paid five thousand—every ing chicken pens. This was firmly | deacon did his best— fastened. The studding was close, And the Ladies’ Aid Society, it prom- and when the wire was on it gave a ised all the rest. rigid surface on sides, ends and the} slopes of the roof. | Over this layer of wire he spread a| first coat of cement. It was well pressed on, so that it oozed through the meshes of the wire for a clinch- ing hold. When the first coating was | thoroughly set another and a heavier ;one was spread over the surface. | Shingle effects were fashioned on the | gables and on the roof the cement was shaped and lined to give an ap- pearance of slating. Then over the | whole outside was laid a finishing veneer of cement paint. We've gotan organ in the church— very finest in the land; It’s got a thousand pipes or more, its melody is grand! And when we sit on cushioned pews and hear the master play, It carries us to realms of bliss, un- numbered miles away. It cost a cool three thousand; and it’s stood the hardest test; We'll pay a thousand on it—the La- dies’ Aid the rest. They'll give a hundred socials, can- tatas, too, and teas. The home is as tight as a boitle. It is impervious to heat or cold, or _| leak of rain; and, as its foundation is \a solid ledge, it can defy the frost to wrestle with it. Mr. Hoag says the | cost of building was about the same as wooden construction would have been, but he says there will be no great number of repairs.—Boston | Globe. A Regular Tom Boy was Susie—climbing trees and fences, jumping ditches, whittling, always | getting scratches, cuts, sprains, bruis- /es, bumps, burns or scalds. But laws! her mother just applied Buck- \len’s Arnica Salve and cured her quick. Heals everything healable— | Boils, Ulcers, Eczema, Old Sores, Corns or Piles. Try it. 25c at F. T. Clay’s. Woodpecker Acts as Alarm Clock | From the New York World, A novel alarm clock is the unprized | possession of the Rev. Dr. George A. Paull, pastor of the Upper Montclair, N. J., Presbyterian Church. He has |to crawl unwillingly from bed at the | call of a woodpecker. | The clergyman was awakened one | morning recently by a hammering on | the roof of his home. He found that | the noise. was caused by a woodpeck- ‘er knocking on the sheet iron cover- |ing on the top of the chimney. Doc- \tor Paull frightened the bird away | and went back to bed, but the noise was renewed. The clergyman gath- ered papers and built a fire, the {smoke of which effectually checked | the bird for a time. Next morning, however, Mr. Woodpecker was there again, trying to drill a hole through the sheet iron cover. The clergyman again burned They’ll bake a thousand angel cakes and tons of cream they'll freeze. They'll beg and scrape and toil and work for seven years or more, And then they’ll start all o’er again for a carpet for the floor. No, itisn’t just like digging out the money from your vest, When the Ladies’ Aid gets busy and says, “‘We’ll pay the rest.’’ Of course we’re proud of our big church from pulpit up to spire; It is the darling of our eyes, the crown of our desire! But when I see the sisters work to raise the cash that lacks, I sometimes feel the church is built oi women’s tired backs. I sometimes can’t help thinking, when we reach the regions blest, That men will get the toil and work and the Ladies’ Aid the rest. —Margaret Brooks, Buffalo Evening News. { Baked Indian Pudding. Put one pint of sweet milk in the double boiler and bring to the boiling point, then gradually stir in halfa cup of corn meal which has been mixed smooth with a little cold milk. Add three eggs, beat very light, to one pint of milk, half cup brown sugar, one-third cup molasses, a pinch of salt, half a level spoonfull of soda, and half a cup chopped suet or butter. Beat all with the corn meal mush, flavor with cinnamon and bake in a moderate oven for two and one half hours. When the pudding has baked about one hour and has begun to thicken, acup of raisins may be stirred in. This ir a fine recipe. The pudding may be eaten with cream or any preferred sauce.—-Ruralist. | paper. After several _ mornings of this work, Doctor Paull took to put- he went the t for his visitor in the! morning, i A Home in-the Hills. ting papers in the fire place before} Southern Missouri and Northern bed, so as to be ready on|Arkansas for fruit growing, sheep raising, poultry and dairying. Land very cheap, good climate, The | now calls regularly at} good water, good health. Drop mea 6:30 o’clock and compels the pastor} postal card for a booklet on Missouri to rise in order to start the smoke/lands, then go and see the country. : E. C. Vandervoert. ~ ths will shut off the tapping alarm. Dr.PRICE'S CREAM BAKING POWDER Made from Grapes Makes the food of superior healthfulness and finest quality Real Estate Transfers. Warranty Deeds. Cora M Willett to M A VanBuskirk |40 A sec 23 West Point $1500.00. | Thos H McGuire to Hinnie Ellstrom lot 17 blk 7 Merwin $225.00. Elizabeth Harrison to W G Mouse 80 A sec 32 Grand River $3000.00. -MR Belisle to T_H_ Cox et al 40 A_ “Psychology of Marriage.’’ He said he had studied psychology to some extent and had been married eleven years and so felt qualified, He be- lieved in early marriages and advised his hearers not only to get wives as speedily as possible, but to praise their hats when they did so, that wo- man’s wsthetic sense might not be Tipped the-bud: - The audience took an intense inter- est in the subject, and its questions covered all phases. One man want- ed to know if a man couldn't love a woman who had money. “Tf you marry for money you'll know it all the rest of your life,” Doctor Fisher answered. Doctor Fisher had small use for the hen-pecked husband. A man was hen-pecked not because he had a masculine wife, but because he lack- ed the essentially masculine good qualities that a woman looked for in Mary Evilsizer to W F Duvall pt)? man anda husband. Doctor Fish- blk 13 West Side Add Butler $2500.00 °" did not believe in 100-yard dashes Carpenter & Shafer Mfg Co toW and running high jumps for women, F Duvall part blk 13 West Side Add the exercises upon which men had Butler $2000.00. waxed strong, but. they simply made Homer Duvall to WF Duvall part a woman masculine. lot 11 blk 18 West Side Add Butler $200.00. sec 30 Spruce $1500.00. E R Curry to W L Small 202 A secs 3 & 34 Elkhart and East Boone $10,000.00. Mo Coal & Const Co to Maud Owen lot 17 blk 7 Merwin $35.00. D L Bearce to W F Duvall part lot 10 blk 18 W Side Add Butler $500.00. Geo P Yoakum to Homer Duvall pt lot 11 blk 13 West Side Add Butler $200.00. Jennie Foster to Mary Evilsizer pt blk 13 West Side Add Butler $10500. F W Sunderwirth to Christian Hirni tract sec 14 Rockville $1200.00. An Ideal Husband Nannie Hawkins to W F Duvall is patient, even with a nagging wife, . - 19 Woact Sida for he knows she needs help. She apg 13 West Side Add But- may be so nervous and run-down in ler $200.00. health that trifles annoy her. If she G Ellstrom et al to Minnie Ellstrom | is melancholy, excitable, troubled lots 7 & 8 blk 1 Merwin $75.00. with loss of appetite, headache, sleep- Geo H Page to P M Miller lot 8 blk lessness, constipation or fainting or 103 Rich Hill $25.00. \dizzy spells, she needs Electric Bit- si i$ ae ‘i ters—the most wonderful remedy for Jennie Williams to G Ellstrom lots ailing women. Thousands of suffer- 7 &8 blk 1 Merwin $80.00. jers from female troubles, nervous H G Walton to R J Thomas pt lot 1 —- psy! “ weak we < nave used them and become health blk 2 Montgomerys 3 Add Butler and “haw Try them. Guarana’ $1500.00. by F. T. Clay. John Robinson to Mary F Herrell tract sec 23 Mt Pleasant $500.00. Minnie Ellstrom to Stella Hayes lots 7& 8 blk 1 Williams Add Merwin $75.00. | a Chas L Goodrick to O $ Snow lot 2/2 Woman in the road as he was riding blk 15 Altona $400.00. }on horseback to Delta County to hold Leslie C Wilson et al to E S Purdy ‘court,’ said F. H. Burns, a Houston 120 A sec 21 Homer $8400.00. /county politician at the capital today. MG Schauer to Leslie C Wilson| “She had a jug of water, and the lots 16, 17, 18, 19 blk 25 Amoret; 120 judge was thirsty. Being a man with A sec 21 Homer $11900.00. ‘a cheery word for everyone, he Jesse B Stuart to Wm H Graves) Stopped her. ; ; : 192 A secs 5 & 6 W Boone & Cass Co! “My dear madam,’ he said, smil- $15757.50. jing, ‘if you will give mea drink of Chas A Davis to Sarai K Symonds | V4ter from your jug, when you want lots 7, 8, pt lot 6 blk 8 Merwin $6000, @ divorce from your husband I will J M Catterlin to J J McElligott 121 5° that it costs you nothing. A sec 3 New Home $500.00. * “Are you a lawyer?” inquired the King Johnson to Myrtle Bobo 30 A woman, handing him the jug. sec 16 Walnut $2000.00. “The judge explained who he-was, $e and, waving a farewell, departed. The very next morning the woman showed up in the courtroom’ and asked for him. She had been separat- Marriage from nearly every possi- ed from her husband and the judge ble angle was discussed by Dr. Geo. | had put an idea into her head. Judge J. Fisher, the international chairman | Taylor was game. He procured a of the Yi-M. C.-A., who spoke on the | lawyer at his own expense. A Drink for a Divorce. Washington, May 2.—‘‘The late | Judge Bob Taylor of Texas once met Bids Men Praise Wives’ Hats. From the New York American. Impossible to be Well It is impossible to be well, simply impossible, if the bowels are constipated. You must pay attention to the laws of nature, or suffer the consequences. Undigested material, waste products, poisonous substances, must be removed from the body at least once each day, or there ish liver is responsible for an and serious disease. Ask He knows why they act * > ; 7

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