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—— Se O—=EeeeEe SYSTEMIC CATARRI. | MR. C. A. LANDGRABE. Mr. ©. A. Landgrabe, Box 25, Coal- burg, Ohio, writes; “1 had beenaslicht sufferer for a number of years, but paid little or no attention to it, until the} spring of this year, when my suffer- ings became very severe, “] had pain in the head, back, spine, liver, chest, and various parts of my body, besides indigestion that caused me much trouble and anxiety, Ioften thought when I retired at night I would not live through it, [ tried medical aid, but to no purpose. “Not knowing what was my main trouble 1 wrote to Dr, Hartman, after reading of his treatment, for advice, telling him of my various ailments, and he notified me at once that I had sys temic catarrh. “After using the first bottle of Peruna I felt relief, so 1 continued to use it | around $17.00 per ton, while the | Wis. until I had taken four bottles, when [ felt entirely cured, I recommend it to all others, believing that they will ex- perience the relief that I did.” Pe-ru-na as a Tonic, Mr. William F, Haw kins, 12 West 8t, | continued use and especially on lands scalds, cuts and piles. 5c at F. T. Westerly, R. I., writes: “I wish to give ry testimony in favor | Fertilizers For Wheat. | The use of fertilizers with wheat in }many sections of Missouri is becom- jing a common practice. Most of the |lands of the state of medium to poor ifertility where wheat is _grown re- SCOTT'S | EMULSION spond to an application of fertilizers dations are made .concerning their use. On badly worn lands the most |remunerative application for wheat | will usually be one of the complete | fertilizers cohtaining from 1 1-2 to /21-2 per cent nitrogen, from 8 to 12 |per cent available phosphoric acid and from 2 to 3 per cent potash appli- ed with a fertilizer drill at the rate of 100 to 150 pounds per acre at the \time the wheat is sown. On lands | that have been fairly well kept up in humus by crop rotation, manuring and legume growing the application of 125 to 150 pounds of good grade of |steamed bone meal will be better | practice. Such a bone meal will con- | tain approximately 1 1-4 nitrogen and from 28 to 30 per cent phosphoric ‘acid, about one-half of which is avail- able. The raw bone meal will also |give good returns, but it contains, from 21-2 to 4 per cent nitrogen | which is more than one can afford to | apply if the nitrogen has been main- | |tained by proper means of farming. The use of 150 to 200 pounds of acid | phosphate on such lands will also be | very remunerative. This acid phos- | phate contains from 14 to 16 per cent | phosphoric acid, practically all of! which is available and its cost is steamed bone costs about $25 and the | |raw bone about $28 per ton. The} ‘acid phosphate has a tendency to jcause the land to” become sour with where lime is already beginning to be jneeded its long continued use is not | of Peruna as a tonic, I have used the | so desirable as that of bone meals. | game for catarrh, and can recommend \Th bo al i¢ to all who are troubled in that way,” | e ne meals also have a more lasting effect due to the large amount ONE ROP BOURBON POULTRY CURE water cures and PREVENTS DISEASE the treatment of White Diseshons ts chicks For and Blackhead and other diseases in eys BOURBON POULTRY CURE HAS NO EQUAL Ine 50c bottle makes 12 galtons of medicine. 29-12 Sold by FRANK T.CLAY Lads Off to Wild West Say Read- | ing Roosevelt Books Gave Them Idea. New York, Sept. 19.—A suitcase |]ives there a woman who says that | filled with rusty revolvers, sheath knives, fishing tackle and assorted cartridges was placed on the desk before Judge Deuel in the Children’ Court today, and a policeman invited attention to the case of the owners of the property. They were Paul Derby and Joseph Barber, each 15 years old, whose down the throat of a gaping _ chicken, Sostro 8 js poems wi te of phosphorous which they contain in a more or less insoluble form and | \their use is to be recommended in |preference to the acid phosphate.— | Prof. M. F. Miller, Agricultural Ex- periment Station, Columbia, Mo. Don’t Break Down. Severe strains on the vital organs, like strains on machinery, cause break downs. You can’t over-tax |stomach, liver, kidneys, bowels or nerves without serious danger to ourself. If you are weak or run- lown, or r strain of any kind, ltake Electric Bitters the matchless, “That 1 did not break down, while enduring a most severe strain, for three months, is due wholly to Elec- tric Bitters." Use them and enjoy health and strength. Satisfaction |guaranteed. 50c at F. T. Clay’s. Celestial Communications. A story comes from a Kentucky town that is worth repeating. There she has immediate communion with the Almighty, and now and then de- livers to those of common clay a mes- '8|sage that she has received from on |high. The fact that these messages jistic hue does nor alter their effec- tiveness, in her opinion. One day she went into the office of and the following general recommen- | } Py re? Nae Fw we bom sg a surface hard, yet springy, dustless, sometimes take on a very material-| home is in Minersville, Pa. They | a well-known attorney and approach- | were arrested in Madison avenue| ed him solemnly as one about to re- Sunday night by a policeman to whom | yea} an awe-inspiring secret. | they said they were on their way! ‘The Lord sent me to you for $25,” West to kill coyotes, wolves and buf-! she announced. falo. | The attorney looked up and smiled. ‘1 think I had better hold you un-| ‘That must be a mistake,”’ he re- til your parents can come and get| plied, blandly, “because the Lord you,” the Judge said. “Minersville | knows I have not got it.” will be better for you than the bound-| Celestial communication was there- ing West, but what put all these ideas | ypon broken off.—Louisville Courier- be Compound Cured Her | j | | | —— | Butler Christian Church. | Wednesday night, September 21, \the special revival and evangelistic services began. O. A. Ishmael, of | Pleasanton, Kan., is our preacher. | His sermons will interest and instruct every one who comes to hear them. The singing in the meeting is inspir- ing. The singers of the church lead, | but it is their aim to have every one |in the congregation take part. Some special selections will be given from time to time. Services begin each jevening at 7:30. Members of other denominations, as well as those who have no religious affiliation, are cor- dially invited to attend the meetings. We shall appreciate the co-operation of all people interested in the welfare of the community and the strength- ening of Christian infuence in the city. On Sunday the pulpit will be occupied by Mr. Ishmael. William M. Mayfield, Minister. It Saved His Leg. “All thought I'd lose my leg,” writes J. A. Swensen, of Watertown, “Ten years of eczema, that 15 doctors could not cure, had at last laid me up. Then Bucklen’s Arnica Salve cured it, sound and well."’ In- fallible for skin eruptions, eczema, salt rheum, boils, fever sores, burns, grow. Clay's. Street Oiling Is Success. Montgomery City, Sept. 21.—Mayor J. B. Ellis, of Ellsbetry, a town in Lincoln county that has been trying a new experiment by oiling the streets instead of sprinkling them, says the | plan has proven successful, and that |plans are now being made by prop- jerty owners to have other streets | oiled next spring. | “The town now has five blocks of |Main street oiled and ten blocks in \the residential district,"’ says Mayor ‘Ellis. ‘The cost of the fifteen | blocks was only $185. The oil used ‘is crude, with a mixture of asphaltum. The street was graded and the oil ap- plied with a sprinkler, The result is Residence Phone 268, Office Phone 3, jand impervious to water and resists | the wear and tear of traffic. Neither | hoofs nor wagon wheels make an im- pression upon it.” To Bates County Folks. ! All those now living in Kansas City or vicinity having resided in Bates county are invited to attend an all- day picnic at Budd park, Kansas City, | next Saturday, September 24. Come, |bring your lunch, and let us have a | good, old-time hand-shaking. | By Order of the Committee. H. E. MULKEY, Registered Veterinary urgeon BUTLER, MISSOURI | Office 4 Harley Smith’s Livery Barn | zit Real Estate Transfers. Warranty Deeds. Chas Pollard to W E Able lots 4 and5 blk7 Glasgows Add R Hill $165.00 Ben E Wade to JF Cecil lot 3 blk 15 Foster $6.00. Virginia Wiley to Elmer Wiley 14a sec 17 West Point $1200.00. Millis M Field to S M Doyle pt blk 2 Fields Add Rockville $315.00. E E Smith to Henrietta Oberlander 60 A sec 15 & 22 E Boone $4500.00. AFTER DOCTORS FAILED —_—— The Farmers Baik SAVINGS DEPARTMENT Deposit $1 in the Farmers Bank &> get one of these Steel Savings Banks It will help you save your money and the bank will will pay interest on what you have. Try saving money, you will enjoy seeing your account The bank always favors its customers. Start Today by Opening an Account with the Farmers Bank I Want to Buy a Farm. This will be what you will hear this fall. The buyers from the East, West, North and South will be coming in to good Old Missouri to buy farms. Will you have yours ready? and ideal time to get it ready. First repair all the old buildings and then paint them with SEWALL’S PURE LIQUID PAINT it has been used with unvarying success for over 30 years. kinds of climate. By having your buildings well painted, and in good repair it will help you sell your farm, It will help you to realize more per acre for it. There are a great many people getting rich buying up old run down farms. Repairing and painting the buildings and selling the farm at a gooa profit. If you don’t want to sell your farm, it is money in your pocket to keep the buildings well painted. It will lengthen the lives of your If you have not, now is It has stood severe weather tests in all buildings. It will make your hotise look more like a place to live. It will make you proud of your home. Sewall’s Pure Liquid Paint is a most dependable paint. If properly applied it does not peel, crack or blister, and it will cover 300 square feet 2 coats. We sell it so you can afford to buy it. Logan-Moore Lumber Co. BUTLER, - MISSOURI Old Knoxville, Iowa. — ‘I suffered with in your head?” “Reading,” said Derby. “And who is your favorite author? asked Judge Deuel. “Theodore Roosevelt,”’ said Derby. | Journal. v| The Lash of a Fiend | would have been about as welcome to A. Cooper, of Oswego, N. -racking cough that de- for years. “It was | merciless ui | fied all remedies ° y , mosttroubleso: ht,”’ he writes, $3.50 Recipe Cures Weak |osttroublesome at night" he writes, Kidneys, Free. Relieves Urinary and Kidney Troubles, Backache Strain- ing, Swelling, Ete. Stops Pain in the Bladder, Kidneys an Den nae lew Discovery which cured I never cough at illions know _ its me “completely. e well at night. I believe there is noth ree atte: Plakham. remedie free. It's by F. T. Clay.” Ferguson, charged with seduction, which was heard in Judge B. F. Jeter’s court Tuesday afternoon, was continued to November 22 on account of the inability of the plaintiff to tes- witnesses. Y., asa} pains low down in my right side fora year or more and was so weak and ner. yous that I could not do my work. I wrote to Mrs. Pink- Reliable | In order that Bates Coun- | anything else adiity Fair visitors may have, the best phys) an opportunity to inspect cians here. ~ do my work and rest}our New Banking Room, "| more for me than e Te 3.""—| we will remain open from ah RF. D. Nog aM. to 12 M. each day Vepratle Govpoui made from ete during the fair. A cordial herbs, is aad honbe, sae led. EC = invitation is extended to all, who suffer displacements, infam.jand we will take pleasure Soe eS +lin showing you through the bearing-down, feeling, fatulency ma [best equipped banking) room in Bates county. RI STATE BAN PEOPLES BANK | Butler, Mo. June 30, 1910—Total deposits........ $183,724.51 June 23, 1909—Total deposits... ..... 120,697.94 The above figures are taken from Official Statements render- State Bank Commissioner.