The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, June 23, 1910, Page 7

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Enrollment of Bates County Club) Deafness Cannot Be Cured | Crops For Low, Wet Land. 0: 12 CEE: EES ie Name. Residence. School. Julia Flamming, Rich Hill, Rich Hill. Anna Frank, Rich Ha, Rich Hill. Eva Buckles, Altema, Altona. Bonnie Wolfe, Butler, Hot Water Jessie Miller, Rich Ha, ———. Susie McCune, Butler, Batler. S. E. Smith, Urich, Merwin. Albert Conrad, Appleton City, —— Estella Pheasant, ““ Green Valley. Emily Woodfin, Hume, Greea Ridge. Clara Mager, Ameoret, Amoret. P. G. Buckles, Adrian, ———. G. H. Miller, Hume, ——. Besse Boner, Hume ——. Eula James, Foster, Foster. Alonzo Briscoe, Hume, ——. Frances Campbell, Foster, Foster. W. C. Chamberlin, Fester, Foster. C. R. Biggs, Hume, Hume. J. V. Bell, Foster, Trip. Blanche Burns, Rich Hill, Keith. Bess Alms, Rich Hit, Hame. Bertha Angle, Clinton, q A. L. Ives, Butler, _ Batler. Kathryne Brown, Appleton City, St. Charles. Elizabeth Blackmon, Adrian, Dixie. Elsie McClenny, Urieh, Freeze Out. Maude Williams, Amoret, Batler. F. L. Davis, Butler, Bertha Cox, Drexel, Mabel Sleeth, Butler, Anna Twombly, Urieh, Maude Briscoe, Rich Hill, Chas. M. Board, Hume, W. L. Coonrod, Rich Hill, Rich Hill. Katie Frank, Sprague, Sprague. Isabel M. Ashley,Rich Hill, Metz. Chester Epley, « Adrian, Loy Ballfinch, Rich Hill, Rich Hill, Mary Fry, Rich Hil, Fry. Alta Chapman, Adrian, ——— Program Committee. Elsie McClenney. Mabe! Sleeth. Bertha Cox. Press Committee. Hume Telephone, Chaade Biggs. Butler Democrat, A. L. Ives, Adrian Journal, Elizabeth Riackmon. Rockville Booster, A, W. Conrad. Urich Herald, Hoyland Rogers. Butler Times, Susie McCune. Bates Co. Record, Clara Mager. Republican-Press, F. L. Davis. Appleton City Journal, Kathryne Brown. Ley Ballfinch. Isabel Ashley. Julia Flaming. Minnie Kelley. Helen Park, Butler, Center. Agnes Ringo, Adrian, Johnnie Stevenson, Archie, Riondike. Appleton City, Brush College. Nanna B. Asbury, Sprece, Archie Finley, Adrian, Rich V. alley. Ina Smith, Butler, If use PUTNAM FADE- LES! DYES you can do your own dyeing just as well as a roaSaAL: Deaeteher der we al- Aap segeet make a failure with Putnam Fadeless Dyes, Mowrog Dave Co., —— Dishwater For Hogs. A Missouri subscriber writes: I. Rich Hill Review, Rich Hill Tribune, Enterprise, Amoret, Mamie Culver, “Ts there any value in the dish- water from the kitchen as a feed for hogs? I had never supposed there was enough good in it te pay for the trouble of saving it, but am told that washed. 9 he omy pao 9 at is easly prepare Slice dipped i to the appetizing value of the dish- egg, rolled in flour and browned on water will no doubt justify saving it under ordinary -conditions.—Wal- | of salt and put in small cups to cool. by local tions, as they cannot reach the goes portion of the ear. | There is only one way to cure deaf- ness, and t is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lin- ing of ‘the Eustachian Tube. When 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- Po. will ye One Hundred Dollars pork | case of Deafness (caused by ) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for cir- culars, free. - F. J. CHENEY &CO., ‘oledo, O. Sold b; Druggists , 75c. : Take Hall's amily Pills for con- stipation. At Our House. K. ©, Post, A good vegetable grater can be made from a tin pail cover by drivihg many holes through it with a nail. If corn meal mush does not brown nicely when it is fried, try brushing over each slice with white of an egg. To remove a fresh mildew stain wet in strong suds, cover with a paste of salt and soap, and put in the rain. Rub over new tinware with lard and thoroughly heat it in the oven be- fore using it, and thus protect it from rust. r ; Aneasily made sandwich is com- posed of finely chopped sardines cov- ered with salad leaves and moistened with the box oil. When not in use, expensive knives should be kept wrapped in tissue pa- per and locked in a box belonging to them, | To keep deep fat from splashing when croquettes are dropped into it, | sift just a little flour into the fat when | it is hot. For the benefit of women with re- cipes which call for eggs by weight instead of numbers, ten eggs of med- ium size weigh a pound. Burns should always be treated quickly to save pain and avoid scars. Baking soda, olive oil, scraped raw potato, molasses and even milk are efficacious. Plaster of Paris figures which nese become dingy and brown, may be brushed with a soft brush and then washed with warm soapsuds without injuring them. A Woman’s Great Idea is how to make herself attractive. But, without health, it is hard for her to be lovely in face, form or temper. A weak, sickly woman will be ner- vous and irritable. Constipation and | Kidney poisons show in pimples, | blotches, skin eruptions and a wretch- ‘ed complexion. But Electric Bitters always prove a godsend to women | who want health, beauty and friends. They regulate Stomach, Liver and Kidneys, ey the blood; give strong nerves, bright eyes, pure breath, | smooth, yen | skin, lovely complex- lion, health. Try them 50c. at F* T. Clay’s. Some Simple Dishes. Cold Pressed Beef—This is nice for luncheons or supper and may be used in various ways. Boil a chunk of beef and one small pepper until the meat will fall from the bone; chop fine, season rather high with salt and , pepper; also wor- cestershire sauce and minced onions, if liked. Boil the liquor to half a pint, mix with the meat, pack ina mold and set away to cool. Thin slices, garnished with parsley, makea nice dish; or use for sand- wiches. By adding a little hot water and heating then pouring over toast- ed slices of bread, another good dish both sides gives another good dish. Very thin slices laid close together on anice biscuit crust, rolled out until bake until done, is easy meat roll. Baste with melted butter and boiling water. Snowballs—Wash one cup rice ai put to cook in one cup water and one When cold turn out in individual |. bananas tea it a thin boiled wok Pudding—Mix one teaspoon- ful baking powder and a pinch of salt} | with one and one-half cups flour, add | Hc. one cup sweet milk, two eggs. Bake in patty ee twenty we half an inch thick, then roll up and 1 or Wallaces’ Farmer. Every year there are some lands which can not be planted to corn, but must be sown in some catch crop. The kind of crop to be sown will de- pend upon the soil, the latitude, the | season and the requirements of the farm in the way of feed, or of the| In some buckwheat | would be a desirable crop, in others | farmer for cash. cowpeas or soy beans, in others mil- let and in still others sorghum. We have a letter from a corre-| spondent in Missouri, who has twen- ty-five acres of low land which he ex- pects will be drained by July Ist. He asks us what crop \he should sow on | ~— this pond. If he has live stock to consume it, or if he can find a market for the crop, sorghum would be the ideal crop for that kind of land. The acre- age of this sort of land on most farms, however, is much smaller than this. Where the farmer has live stock to consume it, there will be more money in this than in any other crop on that land. If not sorghum, then we believe we would sow buck- wheat, which can be sown as late as the middle of July, and preferably sown later rather than early. Again, if the seeding could be done by the middle of June, millet would be a profitable crop, using the Ger- man millet if it is intended to grow a crop of seed, and the Hungarian or common millet if it is intended to use it for hay. These wet places can be used to much better advantage where there stock on the farm than otherwise. In fact, if we are to get the full value of the crops on any farm, we must have more or less live stock. A Dreadful Wound from a knife, gun, tin can, rusty nail, fireworks, or of any other nature, de- mands prompt treatment with Buck- len’s Arnica Salve to prevent blood poison or gangrene. It’s the quick- est, surest healer for all such wounds as also for Burns, Boils, Sores, Skin Eruptions, Eczema, Chap Hands, Corns or Piles. 25e at F, T. Clay's. Poor Richard’s Recipes. Farmer and Stockman, To keepa good hired girl: Hire her at a dollar a week more than she asks and allow her to meet her best fellow seven nights in a week in the front parlor, and if necessary keep the rest of the family in the kitchen. If she has no best fellow, get her one. Allow her each forenoon to receive calls and the afternoons to make calls, If her best fellow hasn't a horse and buggy or an auto, buy him one and teach him how torun it. There isno trouble whatever in keeping a hired girl in this way until she is married. You should never ask her to do any work between meals. To break a horse from cribbing: Take a barrel of sand, head it up tight and place it on the upper floor of the barn. large enough to let the barrel through and set a post sharpened at the upper end squarely below the center of the hole. When the horse sets its teeth on top of the post and straightens up to suck wind, roll the barrel of sand on top of his head. It is seldom that ahorse served in this manner will crib the second time. 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 — Heals everything healable— ils, Ulcers, ma, Old Sores, Corns or Piles. Tryit. 25c at F. T. Clay’s. Monitor Gets to St. Louis in July. Commander W. F. Roberts of the Missouri Naval Reserves has been notified that the monitor Amphitrite will be delivered to the organization at New Orleans between July 5 and A few of the reserves will be sent to the monitor at Philadelphia to fill out the crew for the voyage, and the nd vessel will be manned by the re- serves on the trip from New Orleans to St. Louis. . The Huntress, which has been in the charge of the Missouri Naval Re- serves for three years, is undergoing repairs. Her boiler has been gone over and the boat is to be taken’to the dock - further work.—Repub- See Ree At Bowes Cut a hole in the floor | Farmers Bank Surplus Fund has Reached One Half its Capital Stock CAPITAL STOCK SURPLUS FUND $50,000.00 $25,000.00 ESIDES paying its regular dividends, the Farmers Bank has continued to set aside a portion of its yearly earnings to a 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. WE WANT YOUR BUSINESS E. A. BENNETT, President W. F. DUVALL, Vice-President HOMER DUVALL, Cashier H. H. LISLE, Asst. Cashier Water theob for the Farmers’ | Home. With a view to the improvement of the sanitary conditions of farm houses in Missouri, especially the conditions surrrounding the water supply, the Engineering Experiment Station at the University of Missouri has plan- ned some methods of water supply whereby the farmers can at all times have an abundance of pure water. The investigations conducted show that three systems are available to the farmer, either of which can be install- ed at a moderate cost. The first system is by means of elevated tanks, either in the house or some out building. The attic tank system can be installed witha hot water supply complete forabout $130. The use of a wooden or frost proofed metal tank is advised, as the ‘‘sweat- ing”’ of a steel tank may cause some trouble in a dwelling-house. Of the three systems investigated | the attic tank is the cheapest, while the pneumatic system is considered the best for the farm home for pri-) vate water supply systems. The Engineering Experiment Sta- | tion was established at the Univer- sity-of Missouri last year. This bul- | letin, the second issued, is by Karl A. MeVey, an assistant in the station. It will be sent free to any resident of the state on application to the Director of the Engineering Experiment Sta- tion, Columbia, Mo. Anyone particu- larly interested will be placed on the regular mailing list to receive all bul- letins. DUVALL-PERCIVAL TRUST CO. CASH CAPITAL, $50,000. FARMERS BANK BUILDING, BUTLER, MO. Farm Loans Abstracts We have money to loan on real estate at a low rate of interest with privilege to pay at any time. We will loan your idle money for you, securing you reasonable interest on good security. We pay W. F. DUVALL, President, Arthur Duvall, Treasurer. a; J. B. DUVALL, Vice-President, D. Yates, Title Examiner, IT IS NO SECRET! It is plain to be seen why the PEOPLES BANK CONTINUES TO GROW Ist—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. One-Dollar Bargain. The Twice-A-Week Republic of St. Louis, Mo., the oldest and best-known semiweekly newspaper in the United | States, will celebrate its one hundred | and second anniversary in July, and | for a short time is making the remark- able subscription offer of three full! years for $1.00, Any number of sub- scriptions will be accepted at this re- duced price while the rate is in effect, | but positively no premiums or cash| . commission will be allowed. If you) ‘ are already a subscriber your order | will be accepted now fora renewal | and your time extended three years from present date of expiration. Send all orders to The St. Louis Re- | public, St. Louis, Mo. Write for free sample copy. 35-3t. | SECU RITY 4th—It has for the convenience of its friends and patrons a daily live stock market re- port. Sth—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) Always Bank.’ “A Bank on which you can The Walton Trust Company Butler, Missouri 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 ood stable security from its trowers. It invites your business on a conservative banking basis, whether large or small, and the special per- sonal attention of its officers is $55,000.00 .. $87,000.60 BNE hdc sciveansvecniteinnsis Surplus Fund and Und. Profits.. Loans money on Farms at low interest rates. ie 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 : } | iven all matters intrusted to its care and attention. Speeccesetosncorostorenren i eemaneien ee eey Frank Allen John E, Shutt C. A, Allen Wm. W. Trigg T. C. Boulware W. E. Walton THE John Deerwester Max Weiner C, H. Dutcher Missouri State Bank Frank M. Voris =A. B. Owen J.B. OF BUTLER | | | 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. Investments interest on time deposits.

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