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—_ . donde, are SECURITY Ought first to be considered in the selection of a depository. “The Old Reliable” offers the best of security to its depositors in the shape of $350,000 of clean, unimpair- ed, quick assets and demands Ps stable security from its rrowers. It invites your - business on a conservative banking basis, whether large or small, and the special per- sonal attention of its officers is iven all matters intrusted to its care and attention, THE Missouri State Bank OF BUTLER oF BOURBON POULTRY CURE down the throat of a gaping chicken, destroys the worms and saves the chick's life. A few dropsin the drinking. water cures and PREVENTS DISEASE For the treatment of White Diarrhoeain chicks and Blackhead and other diseases in turkeys BOURBON POULTRY CURE HAS NO EQUAL Ine 50c bottle makes 12 gallons of medicine. 29-12 Sold by FRANK T, CLAY ORRERERER ERE BBB BEE. G0 Any one filling out this and presenting at our store will receive Free a Dollor Bottle of McEI- rie’s Wine of Cardui, the greatest medicine for women. Sign your name here. Not good after 12 bot- tles are given away. CLAY’S Prescription Drug Store NORTH SIDE SQUARE. “The right place.’’ ; o BMRB HBOS Pie 14 Pin BDA 1G Notice. To the. holder or holders of school district bonde of school district number 10 of Walnut Township, Bates coun'y, Missouri, each of $200, bearing interest at the race of six per cent annual.iasued by said School District Board for and in behalf ofiaid School District, dated Jaly Ist, 1905, and redeemable July lst, 1910, at the Boatmans Bank of St. Leuls, Mo You are hereby notified that the following described deciared due and payable at the Boatmans Bank of St. Louis, Mo, on the first day of July, 1910: Bonds Nos. 1,2 and 3, with all accraed interest, and that interest will For the Housewife. A Woman’s Revenge. A thick bottle will prove a very ef-| Recently g popular and busy physi- ficient potato masher; a baking pow-' cian who lives on the South side was jder-can .is just the right size for a| called to see a woman. There wasn't biscuit cutter, and will serve as an| anything particular the matter with 2 DEGEEFR © LG Se | excellent utensil for chopping pota- toes, bread, vegetables and fruits. A fruit jar, or a long thick bottle will answer admirably for a rolling pin. An inch-wide strip of clean white cot- ton cloth, wet and drawn tightly around both edges of the pie and pasted together with flour will keep pies from running over while baking. A collar of stiff white paper pinned about a layer cake will keep the icing from running down the sides, and one broad enough to cover the whole sides ‘of the cake will keep the filling in until it sets. Equal parts of strong cold tea and linseed oil—about one pint each, the whites of two fresh eggs stiffly beat- en, and two ounces of spirits of salts mixed and well shaken, makes a fine polish for floors and furniture. For furniture, put a few drops on an old silk cloth and rub vigorously, going over a small space atatime. Fora painted floor, use a cotton or woolen cloth. To insure a straight edge on table linen, draw a thread before cutting, | and cut with the thread. The same | should be done with sheets and pil-| low slips, if the goods is not torn off | the bolt. When the carpet needs patching, | cut the patch the required size, smear | on the wrong side with a thick paste of flour and water, lay the patch on the hole or thin place, smooth it care- fully, then with a hot flatiron, iron until the paste is dry. Before laying acarpet, rub the boards over with | turpentine, to guard against ravages | of insects. Leave a few of the inner husks on | the corn for boiling, as they keep the corn hot longer after putting on the | table, and add a sweeter taste to the corn,—Commoner. Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local applications, as they cannot | reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deaf- ness, and thaf is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lin- ing of the Eustachian Tube. this tube is inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hear- ing, and when it is entirely closed, Deafness is the result, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal con- dition, hearing will be destroyed for- ever; nine cases out of ten are caused by Catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed cundition of the mucous sur- faces. We will give One Hundred Dollars | for any case of Deafness (caused by | catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Send for cir- culars, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., | Toledo, O. | Sold by Druggists, 75c. | Take Hall’s Family Pills for con- stipation. For Our Young Housewives. | Commoner. | Delicious Salad—Grind, one-half | cupful of peanuts; add half a cupful | of vinegar, one beaten egg and butter | size of an egg; cook the vinegar, egg | and butter together, mix with the eanuts and pour over two sliced ananas. Salad dressing—One le ve tea- spoonful each of mustard and salt, one tablespoonful of sugar, one egg and half a cup of vinegar, with a cease on above bonds on and after July Ist, 1910, - LEWI3 ST AKER, Trustee Walnut Township Attest: MRS,J.R WEADON, 8i-td School District Clerk. A Record in Milk Production. Columbia, Mo., June 9.--The world’s, record for milk production has bee broken by Missouri Chief Josephine, the prize cow of the college of agri- culture of Missouri University. In the four month’s contest, which ended yesterday, the total exceeds the past world’s record 10 per cent. Chief Josephine gave 11,536 pounds of milk in the four months. The production averaged 96.4 pounds a day for. the 120 days. The cow that previously held the record was Colantha Fourth Johanna. The amount of milk that Josephine-gives is ‘said to be. twice as much as the average cow gives in a year. |—Mrs. E. E. D., New York. piece of butter size of an egg and one teaspoonful of flour. Stir all together add cook; your over chopped cabbage with a little onion added. May be used with cold potatoes.—Mrs. W. A. T., New York. ’ Old Virginia Salad Dressing—(Good and very easy to make.) One egg well beateft;“ scant teaspoonful of sugar, one teaspoonful -of mustard, a little salt, pinch of black pepper; beat all well together; add a small cup of sugar, stirring all the time, then a spoonful of butter; set on the stove and cook until about as thick as cream; stir while ‘cooking to keep it nice and smooth. Fine for potatoes, jeral gallons of ice cream, her, and rather bluntly he told her so. ‘All you need,’’ said the doctor,” is to keep saner hours, stop eating all sorts of indigestible trash and take | outdoor exercise occasionally. You) have no troubles that won’t cure | themselves if you live right."’ | The next afternoon a man rang the | doorbell at the doctor’s home. ‘‘Ain’t| you going to use this taxi?’”’ he said | to the wife, jerking his thumb toward a taxicab standing at the curb. “‘I've been waiting an hour.” | She had not ordered a_ taxicab. When she called up the garage over | the phone she was told that a wo-| man’s voice had ordered the machine, giving her name and house number. | In a few minutes agother drove up| with the same story. Then followed | a carriage, hair dressers, three boxes of flowers from as many different florists, a half dozen messenger boys and sev- By the time she had gotten rid of them all, the doctor's wife was almost ina} state of nervous collapse. | The woman who had been advised to go to bed at night and otherwise |take care of her health afterward cou- fided to a friend, “Yes, I did it. That doctor talked to me as if I didn’t have any sense, and I thought I'd get even with him by making his wife chase to the door all afternoon. I think it was areal cute kind of revenge, don't you, dear?’’—-K. C. Post. Itch Relieved at Once. That terrible itch disappears wit) | the FIRST DROPS of a simple com- | pound of oil of wintergreen, thymo! and glycerine mixed in D, D, D. Pre- scription, This soothing, healing lo- tion, used externally kills the eezema gern instantly. Heretofore the D, D. D. remedy has been sold only in $1.00 bottles; but as a special offer, any sufferer i this town who has never tried D. D, D. can now try this remedy in a spec} | K. C, stock ial bottle at 25c. It cures the itch in- stantly. We KNOW this. F. T. Clay, When | Butler, Mo. The Negro Soldier Confessed. Seattle, Washington, June 13.— When Mayor Hiram C. Gill learned today of President Taft's refusal to remove the negro soldiers from Fort | Lawton, tte ordered sixty emergency policemen placed in the Fort Lawton district. The Mayor also ordered the closing of negro resorts near the fort where negro soldiers have obtained liquor. Private Nathaniel Bledser ma¢ full confession to the police today ter he was turned over to the authorities. He said that he- wa drunk when ding’s house. He begged to be permitted to plead guilty and be sentenced. If you use PUTNAM FADE- Ese DYES and are not satis- fied, we will refund your money or ake you free enough dye to ma e your dyeing satisfactory. Monroe Drua Go. Quiney, Li, Rubber Gloves. From the Woman’s National Daily. To mend a tear or cut ina rubber glove: Put a piece of adhesive plaster, a little larger than the rent, inside the glove, hold the sides of the tear in place and press the plaster and the glove together firmly. Of course the sticky side of the plaster is laid next to the glove. This will hold the rub- ber fast and it will wear for many days despite the unfortunate rent. $3.50 Recipe Cures Weak Kidneys, Free. lettuce or any other salads.—Mrs. D. D. O., Alabama. (Mrs. O. recom- mends the young housewives to get the recipe booklet, free for the ask- ing, published by one of our best baking powder companies. Many of the free cookery books given out by advertisers are well worth having.) * spoonfuls of vinegar. Cook, and when ready to use, add half a cupful ‘of cream; if no cream, use milk, but not quite so much. A few nuts chop- | Jas ped and added to. cabbage salad with | {%, this dressing is very nice. If kept in ‘acool place, twice the quantity may ‘| be made and will keep several days. For Salad Dressing—One beaten Srivbh -|egg, one teaspoonful of mustard, one | aches; the }tablespoonful each of sugar, melted | 72, butter, a little salt and five table-| $7 Relieves Urinary and Kidney Troubles, Backache Strain- ing, Swelling, Etc. Stops Pain in the Bladder, Kidneys and Back. Thaye ® recipe for these trou! fee. that son beeen ag eee aie eek eat ae oe eo 'Nfeny & dete would charge you 83.0 on, for writing thie Farmers Bank Surplus Fund has Reached One Half its Capital Stock CAPITAL STOCK........ $50,000.00 SURPLUS FUND.......... $25,000.00 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 of its capital stock, or $25,000.00. A bank, in order to be in a first class condition, must make money, and the banking institution that is making money is con- tinually becoming stronger and of greater value to’its customers. he entered Mrs. Red- | Bledser said that no | other soldier should share the blame. | more taxis, a couple oft WE WANT YOUR BUSINESS E. A. BENNETT, President W. F. DUVALL, Vic HOMER DUVALL, Cashier e-President H. H. LISLE, Asst. Cashier LJ 2B CUA NCS A ee a MISSOURI PACIFIC IRON MOUNTAIN Missouri Pacific Time Table BUTLER STATION. Following is corrected time of trains: Trains North ( No.2 6:08am $ ie 12:36 pam, us bain. 12:06 pom, 8340 pan, ‘Local Freight \ 900 pm, sam Trains South ( Ne “ “..% Local Freigbt | St Lonis Stock { Vest, departs ) Kast, arrives aera departs " arrives, 12 Ihp.m. 94bp.m. °. he Interstate - 78 pm. 12205 &m, Freight trains do not carry passengers, All freight for forwarding must be at depot not later than eleven o’ciock a m or be held for following dave torwarding. Freight for Interstate Division must be delivered before five o'clock p. m, No freight billed for this train in morning. E . VANDERYOOR SeFnt, Missouri Pacific have through ,e car service which delivers 1andise from New York in But- nthe fifth morning out, fourth ning delivery from Cincinnati 4 Cleveland, third morning from idianapolis and Chicago, second aorning from St. Louis. Will be glad to furnish you routing orders which will insure quick time. OR. J. M. NORRIS, Eye, Ear and Throat Specialist Eyes Tested Free and Glasses Prop- erly Fitted. Office on south side 49-tf over Star Bakery. DR. J. M. CHRISTY Diseases of Women and Children a Specialty Office over A. H. Culver Furn. CO. BUTLER - MISSOURI Office Phone 20 House Phone 10 DR, J. T. HULL Dentist Entrance same that leads to Stew- ard’s Studio. North side square _ Butler, Missouri DR. H. M. CANNON DENTIST Butler, Missouri East Side of the Square Phone No. 312 T. C. BOULWARE Physician & Surgeon Office North Side Square, Butler, Mo. Diseases of women and chil- dren a specialty. | Office Phone 3. Residence Phone 203, H. E. MULKEY, BUTLER, SISsOURI Harley Smith’s Livery Barn DUVALL-PERCIVAL TRUST CO. CASH CAPITAL, $50,000. FARMERS BANK BUILDING, BUTLER, MO. Farm Loans We have a complete set of Abstract Books and will fur- Abstracts alah shabeachs ~ aby real porch Fagg eo byniee ad examine and perfect titles to same. Investments We will loan your idle money for you, securing reasonable interest. on good security. We interest on time deposits. We have money to loan on real estate at a low rate of interest with privilege to pay at any time. you pay 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, 3rd—It prohibits the loaning of its funds to its officers and employees. and patrons a daily live stock market re- port. 5th—It gives to patrons without cost the protection afforde y one of the latest burglar proof safes. 4th—It has for the convenience of its friends | 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.,”’ The Walton Trust Company | Butler, Missouri | GE sihatinsinsoonbovenpesanvsey $55,000.00 Surplus Fund and Und. Profits....$87,000.00 Loans money on Farms at low interest rates. Has complete Abstract of title to all real estate in Bates county, which we keep up with the records daily. Furnish reliable abstracts on | short notice. Pays interest on Time Deposits. Always has good securities for sale. DIRECTORS John E. Shutt Frank Allen C. A. Allen | Wm. W. Trigg T. C. Boulware W. E. Walton | John Deerwester Max Weiner C. H. Dutcher | Frank M. Voris A. B. Owen J. B. Walton