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Rm Ie heawe Tickling in the Throat “Just a little tickling in the throat!” Is that what troubles you? But it hangs on! Can't get rid of it! Home rem- edies-don't-take hold. __You_need something stronger—a regular medicine, a doctor’s medicine. Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral contains healing, quieting, and soothing proper- ties of the highest order. Ask your doctor about this. No alcohol in this cough medicine. J-C Ayer Co., Lowell, Mass. onstipati itive v , tinue? An active i oe cs a mmr de See en ePtharebeeriis, Whakdes your doctor say? CHARLEY BEARD AUCTIONEER BUTLER, MO. Having a wide acquaintance with farmers and stockmen and) being thoroughly familiar with) the quality and breeding of stock | and prices of the same, and hav-) “tng made a majority of the larg-) est and best sales in this section, as also having been connected with some of the largest sales in the state, gives me a thorough knowledge and experience of the sales business. If you are thinking of making a public sale, it will pay you to employ an auctioneer who has been tested, one who has had many years of solid experience and has given the different methods of the sales business a very careful study. A SUCCESSFUL EXPERIENCED AUCTION- EER MEANS DOLLARS TO YOU ON SALE DAY. Send for me or ask for my free booklet of complete instruc- tions as to how a public sale should be arranged for and adver- tised. Terms reasonable. See or write me for dates. WRITE, OR PHONE 53 AT MY EXPENSE Percheron Stallions, 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. Company, Butler, Missouri The Walton Trust | | OTT, | SA a ent eee Corner a te $55,000.00 Surplus Fund and Und. Profits....$87,500.00 Always has money to loan at lowest interest rates. We own and keep up with the records a com- plete Abstract of Title to all the land and town lots in Bates county. Will furnish reliable ab- stracts on short notice. Issues Time Deposit Certificates payable in six or twelve months, bearing five per cent interest. NOTHING SAFER. The Walton Trust Company has the largest surplus fund and undivided profit account. making it the STRONGEST FINANCIAL IN- STITUTION IN BATES COUNTY. YOUR PATRONAGE SOLICITED Wm. E. Walton, Pres. Frank. M. Voris, Vice-Pres. Frank Allen, Secy. C. A. Allen, Asst Secy. as 4 Most farm wagons are pretty much alike, except — THE MILBURN It’s different—and it’s better, a whole lot better. It's made by men who know how, and whose aim has been to produce the best and have done it, It wouldn't be business for you to take our word for et & 4 business for zou to lnvee te, to check bo we say ether we're right or wrong. fore you drop in decide f if i these vagons over, make up your mind what the weak parte of to look these wagons 5 z you can see w! the Milburs differe ter. Naturally it eren' costs a little more a¢ first, but not nearly so much at the end of a few Butler, Mo. McFarland €» Sons, ~ FARM FURROWS. Farmer and Steckman The addition of each year’s experi- ence convinces me that most men cut hitched to a wagon he wouldn't back | - afoot. Now comes a subscriber who proposes to solve the problem by ad- vising that the colt be hitched to thee hind axle and in that way he can be When You Think ,@ i i i ith every Of the pain which many women experience wit " i the gentleness and kindness always associ-, a ge ge ~ seem to be almost a miracle. iit 1 ® | Iam a subscriber to a prominent | ‘| present time I have never seen anad- | their corn too soon. The last corn I cut last year made the best feed. bi Many hurry up to get a field cut be- The man who can see only the big fore it rains. For my partI would ©" and not the stalk without a shoot, rather wait until after the rain has~is agreeable to talk to, but if he runs fallen and the field dried up. A_ his own business with that much opti- heavy rain on green shocks isa bad ™ism he invariably runs it to the thing. wall. Last week I took a train ridé. The One should not be regarded as a route was one I have traveled often Pessimlst, because he believes that we are to have a hard winter and is made to “back an empty wagon.” in the last few years, but there’s al- , ni : . ways something new to be seen. This making provisions for it. The pessi- time the new things were the silos ™ist sits by some other man’s fire that have recently been erected. One "4 just groans while the optimist is had been filled and the juice was ooz- ting fuel for a fire of his own. ing down the side. It seems tome There is such a thing as feeding a that such a job cannot be airtight. drove of young roosters until they Along about this season of the year ‘¢!! for less fhan they would have the boy without a gun puts up the brought, probably a month sooner. best line of talk he has for his father This month of feeding is not only to get him one, The gun father “one for nothing, but you pay some- bought me when I reached the hunt- thing for doing it, besides. A man) ing stage of youthful development I will sometimes do it with a bunch of | still have, and I am just as fond of Steers, and something with hogs. rabbit hunting as ever. This was a How’s This? favorable summer for rabbits and un- less there is a good deal of killing We offer One Hundred Dollars Re- | d this winte ill ward for any case of Catarrh that) caredhge aaa oe cannot be cured by Hall’s Catarrh ” igi Cure. F.J. CHENEY, | This is what a friend wrote ona ; Toledo, 0. | post card: ‘Tell Furrows to tell his We, the undersigned, have known ag : ave o man ote sae \F. J. C for the last 15 years, readers to have hgphspnade vant beside ph Way Fg A. % honeeabie the feed table of the ensilage cutter j), 1] business transactions and finan- and cut every band and jerk the cially able to carry out any obligations string. Those strings cut up in short made by his firm. lengths and carried into the silo are Walding, Kinnan & Marvin, iPgerdaes Whole Druggists, Toledo, O. not good for stock, I know aman — jatl's Catarrh Cure is taken inter- who lost four cows that were fed on nally, acting directly upon the blood ensilage, and the cut strings did the and mucous surfaces of the system. business.” They are cut so fine and Testimonials sent free. Price 75c! mixed so thoroughly that stock must Pete be Drucgiste, 5c. eat them. The time of one man to Take Hall's Family Pills for con- do this would probably be well spent. stipation. It used to be that pigs getting into : the garden was one of the woman's Thresh Cowpeas. greatest worries, but now the balking \);scouri nuratist, of the telephone beats any othe? great many Missourifarmers have When a woman cannot have the daily become intimately acquainted with the chat with her neighbor or is cheated two-fold worth of cowpeas—their ‘out of “rubbering’’ at the right time feeding andfertilizer values—andare | by a telephone that will not ring, it is regularly growing them each year and (dead sure the bread will not be good and with increasing acreage. Many | that day and the cake will fall flat. other farmers have becomeinterested Calf-weaning time is one of the in cowpeas through reading about | noisiest on the farm. On a still, them or hearing their merits set forth | frosty morning, when the wagons are | at Farmers Institutes but have been | | rattling over-the roads and out to the | deterred from making a start at their ‘cornfields and the calves are making ' growth by the scarcity and high price things hum and are answered by the of seed. Each spring the price of 'deeper tone of the cows, the ‘eternal | cowpea seed usually starts at $2.50 to | quietness of the country,’’ spoken of $3 per bushel and advances rapidly | by city folks; becomes a myth. But up to $4.50 and finally, are notobtain- | all these sounds are more soothing able any price. | than the clang and the rattle of the When discussing with prominent | city. farmers and advisability of threshing Three or four of my friends and ac- | COWpeas for seed we have been told quaintances wear boots, and that is that the ordinary threshing machine all I know who do. The standard mutilites the peas so badly as to ren-| cartoon of the farmer fits him out with der them practically worthless for, a pair of high-topped’ boots, into seed. This can be obviated by wait- | which his pants are tucked, The ing until the grain threshing seasonis | ‘city is twenty-five years behind the °Ve?, then prevail on the thresher to times in reproducing the farmer, both |Temove the alternate spikes from his in picture and language. It would) thresher cylinder, take out the con- ‘do some of the city stickfasts good to cave entirels and substitute a blank get out in the country and see how OF a hard board and, by running with | farmers really live. jlow power the peas can be hulled | The cry of the times is that nothing with a very few broken ones. They | ‘is impossible. I wish to amend that willthen have to be put through agatn | a little. On one Tuesday afternoon I | with higher power—fed in back ofthe | clipped a grass patch from which ! °Y’ linder—to be properly cleaned baal seed had been harvested in July and will have to be run through a fanning | in which foxtail has been coming in mill. True, this entails me work | quite thickly. On Friday morning and bother but the result will pay for that foxtail had sprung up again and jit, | had formed quite well-filled seed If it is not practicable to use a heads. Now I want to insist that| fresher, Our Folks are urged to re- | keeping foxtail from making seed is | Sort to the pioneer method—the flail \impossible. It will make seed below |e order to insure having : supply jthe reach of the cutterbar if not al. |of aniee ond — preg ee uate | lowed: to get higher. jagainst those ruinously high prices. | |Last July the writer paid $4.50 per | English agricultural paper and am fe agp ag org ee close reader of the same. Up to the would grow—it was a case of “Hob- | son’s choice.” ated with womanhood | alleging, among other {a hile i eral no woman rebels against what she re- ba aden wow! necessity there is no woman who would not gladly be free from this recurring period of pain. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription makes weak women strong and sick women well, and gives them freedom from paia. It establishes regalarity, subdues inflam: mation, heals ulceration and male weakness. Sick women are invited to — Dr, igh by nae, All correspondence strictly private and sacredly f 5 Write without fear and without fee to World's Dispensary Med- confidential. cures fe: = I ical Association, R. V. Pierce, M. D., President, Buffalo, N. Y. If t a book that tells all about woman’s diseases, and how to cure Pr ery ies, send 21 one-cent stamps to Dr. Pierce to pay cost of mailing only, and he will send you a free copy of his great thousand-page illustrated Common Sense Medical Adviser—revised, up-to-date edition, in paper covers, In handsome cloth-binding, 31 stamps. Order of Publication. STATE OF MI8SOURI, las County of Bates. 5 In the Circuit Court, October term, 110. In vacation September 21, 1910. M. L. Leubben, Plaintiff, ve. Frank Elvin and Margar: t Kivin, Defendants. The State of Missourl to the above named de- fendant Greeting: Now at this day romes the platotitf herein by his attorney and files his bee tion and affidavit things that defendants | Are non-residents of the State of Missouri. Whereupn it is ordered by the clerk in vaca tion that eaid defendants be notified by publica — Mon that pense, has commenced a suit against them in this court, the object and general nat- ure of which is ‘o recover a judgment against the defendants on two notes executed by the defendants to Duvall-Percival Trust Company | and aesigned to plaintif® said notes bearing date October 31, 1907, one payable December 1, 198, and the other December 1, 1909, each | bearing interest at the rate of eight per cent p'ranpom from December 1, 1907, said inter- vot being payable -emi-annually, and that the property of ihe defendant has been attached for tne payment of eald debts and that unless the anid defendant be and appear at this court, at the next term ther of, to be began and holden at the court hon-e ip the city of Butler, in said | county, on the first Monday in February, 1911, and on or before the frst day of said term, an- wer or peed to the petition in the said cause, same will be taken as confessed and judgment | will be rendered accordingly. And ttis further ordered that a copy hereof be pnblished, # vordiog to law, in Tux BuTLER WERKLY TIMES, & newspaper podiiehes in sald coun y of Bates, forfour weeks successively, published at least once a week, the last inser- tion to be at least thirty days before the firet day of sald pext February term «f this court, vt, D EMBREE, Circuit Clerk, A true copy of the record Witness my hand and seal of the Cir- [seat] cult court of Bates county, this 2let day of September, 1910, T D. EMBREE, Circuit Clerk, 49 4t | Notice of Final Settlement. i Notice is hereby given to all creditors and others Interested in the estate of Henderson Miller, deceased, that I J, W. Darby ad- | ministrator of said estate, intend to make final settlement thereof, at the next term of the Bates County Probate Court, in Bates county, State of Miseourt. to be held at Butler Mis souri, on the l4th day of November, 19!0, J. W. DARBY, Administrator. Sl-tt Notice of Final Settlement. Notive is hereby given to a'l creditors and | others interested in the estate of Clement Goodin deceased, that I, Henry Goodin, ad- minietrator of eald estate, intend to make final settlement thereof at the next term of the Bates County Probate Court, in Bates county, State of Missouri, to be held at Butler, Mis- souri, on the 14th day of November, 1910 | . ENRY GOODIN, | 51-4 Administrator. Notice of Final Settlement. Notice is hereby given to all creditors dnd | others interested in the estate of Samuel Y. Forbes, deceased, that I,Josephine Forbes, ad- miniteratrix of said rata e, intend to make final s+ttlementtherenf atthe next term of the Bates County Probate Court, in Bates county, State of Missouri, to he held at Butler. Missouri, on | the }4th day of November, 1910 JOSEPHINE FORBES, Slat Administratrix. Notice of Final Settlement. | Notice is i given to ell creditors others interested in the estate of Mary O. S: ter deceased, that I,J. A.saddler, »dminist tor of said estet, intend to make final set! ment thereof, at the next term ot the Bates County Probate Court, in Bates county Mis- souri, to be held at Butler, Missouri, on the | lth aay of November, 1910. J. A, SADLER, 51-4 Administrator. Notice of Final Settlement. Notice is hereby given to all creditors and | others interested inthe estate o David H, | Ford, deceased, that I, 5. 5 Fox, ad- ministrator of tald estate intend to make final settlement thereof, at the next term of the Bates County Probate Court, tn Bates county, State of Missoarl, to be held at Butler, Mis- | souri, on the lath day of November, 1910. 8. §. FOX Sl-4t Administra.or. Notice of Final Settlement. Notice is hereby given to all creditors and others int-rested in the estate of W. R, Davis, deceased, that I, Mary Davis, executrix | will of said estate, intend to make @nal setite- | ment thereof, st the next term of the Bates County Probate Court, in Bates county, State of Missouri, to be held at Butler, Missouri, on the 14th day of November, 1910 MARY DAVIS, 51 at Execatrix. vertisement of an automobile in that | wee paper. This I think is significant be- | M. E. Church South cause it shows the difference in the | ; f ... | Sunday School, 9:30 a. m. Preach- financial standing of the American |. , 11 a m. Subject, “The Life and the English farmer. American| ‘ens ” automobile manufacturers have found pe et gpg’ or the agricultural press to be a good|T 2.06. 6:80 p. m. Special ev advertising medium, for the simple St Nine 7-99 p,m All arene reason that American farmers are| Jited to attend and onde thie eee amply able to buy autos and they are tees if buying them. I am glad I am an, American farmer. | Aneighbor of mine has the sale- going habit bad. No matter what the weather, he goes. I have known him to start out in a pouring rain, and in an open rig at that. If aman had particular need for something to be sold that day it would not be so bad; but I never yet knew .this man to do J. A. JARED, Pastor. Notice of Final Settlement. Notice ig hereby given to all creditors and guises interested in the estate of Lucretia lones, deceased, that I J. H. Botkins, gzegutor of sald estate, intend 10 make settlement thereof, at the next term of the Bates County Probate (ourt, in Bates conn- ate, Sar oma, He , 01 r, 1910, I. HB. is, 51-4 Executor, as much as to bid at a sale. N u Some time ago'a subscriber to this ' Spee graebeshe sro paper asked for advice on teaching a | Snir. Bee f a. four-year-old colt how to back an em- | saa o make pty wagon. It seems that this colt *| would handle himself all right in ev-| Mfssoar lery other implement, but when shat ‘A Rat is a Bad | No, 200 Southweat Limited “No 37 Madison Accomm | No. 604 Butler Local Freight........, MISSOURIN ( paciFic | | IRON \ MOUNTAIN = Missouri Pacific Time Table BUTLER STATION. Following is corrected time card to date: NORTH. No, 2°6 Kansas City Accommodation. 6:08 a. m No, 208 St. Leuis & K. C. Mail & Kx_12:3¢ p m, No 210 Southweat Limited... . Kansae City Stock... wlcien Looal Freight... .... No, 207 K. C & Joplin Mati & Bx. 13: No, 205 Nevada Accommodation .... No, 201 (Local Freight)........ as INTERSTATE. WEST. No. 603 Madison Local Freight, ation 73a m, lip m,. EAST. No. 688 Butler Accommoda*ion 12:01 p, m 5:00 p.m, Freight trains Nos. 693 and m4 carry passen- gers on Interstate Diviaion, No other freight tralns carry passengers. All freight for forwarding must be at depot notlater than elev.n o’c vck a m or be held for hee bng Td days torwarding. Freight for Interstate Division must be aelivered before five o’clock p. m, No freight billed for this train in morning, E. U. VaNpERVooRT, Agent. 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 ot 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. G. BOULWARE. Physician & Surgeon Office North Side Square, Butler, Mo. Diseases of women and chil- dren a specialty. B, F. JETER, Attorney at Law = Notary Public East Side Square Phone 186 BUTLER, MISSOURI Notice of Trustee’s Sale. Wheress, William R. Dunbam and yienged Citizen” - Rid yourself of them now, quickly and surely, by getting a 25c box of our American Rat Paste It does the work. Will not harm dogs, cats or chickens. 1 (32) in » containing 462-8 acres more or down fant inet Soul Stam ister ae mane 7, and wh: reas, {i fa ata or refuse to interest, ae ieee ing valid z ia ma ll , for cash to thereon and ‘hoa. Deen ytd Ea Fats er cited nd bim in a beck in eae