The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, November 10, 1910, Page 6

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Troubled with a cough? A can ever take the place of touch with No alcohol Ayer’s Pills. For Coughs and Colds him, consult him in this cough medicine. Sugar-coated. Ali vegetable. tive. Dose, only one pill. Sold for nearly sixty years. Ask your Electric Flashes. Electricity is now being used to un- load ships. Since every hour a ves- sel lies in dock means so much less in hard cold, bronchitis, or some There is a medicine made for just] | her earning power any apparatus to Your doctor knows } facilitate the loading and unloading of | No medicine ‘boats is a distinct economy. Power- your doctor. Keep in close} |i! motors operate the hoists and der-! ntly, trust him fully.J "**S Electric ore hoists are being install- a3s- odin some of the largest mines at Act directly on the liver. Gently laxa- Goldfield. doctor A cable to carry 3,000 horse-power Butter Trade Tricks. Pure food laws, National and State, and city ordinances prescribe the quality of milk and butter to be eli- gible for sale as food, the butterfat content and solids not fat being the chief specifications of the former and the maximum amouut of moisture permissible in the latter. How to evade these requirements has evoxed many ingenious schemes by avari- cious dealers. Over in England just now a certain ““T. Reed Pinaud” is exploiting an invention which he claims will convert one-pound of but- ter into two and a quarter pounds and he unblushingly explains that his process is to incorporate into the pound of real butter a pint of milk and a spoonful of salt, a rapidly mov- ing machine doing the trick. That scheme may satisfy John Bull but Dr. Wiley and various food in- spectors in this country would speed- ily bring that exploiter to law. While they are unequal to the task of cop- ing with the subterfuges of the oleo is being laid on the bottom of Nara- makers and dealers, they generally nsett Bay between Nayett Point manage to catch up with the indi- and Connecticut Point. This cable is vidual who perverts milk and butter. 7,000 feet long. All the alley-ways and dark corners in the city of Washington are to be If use PUTNAM FADE- - . : DYES and are not satis- lighted at night for the suppression of fied, we will refund your money crime. pt oF Nt — ave ~~ Wireless is being adapted for sub- Monroe Drv Co., Quiney, li marines. The General Electric Company has se started its mammoth plant and indus- Snake Slept 45 Years. trial city near Erie, Pa. Bloomfield, N. J., Oct. 31.—Work Walter Wellman’s airship, in which men excavating for the Jackawanna he hoped to cross the Atlantic, was railroad improvements yesterday equipped with electric lights. came upona large blacksnake, ten _Ultra-violet rays are being used to feet from the surface of the ground. | sterilize water and milk. These rays The reptile was over four feet long. of light kill the microbes. It soon showee signs of life and com- _ An electric truck is being used ona menced to crawl around. Then one farm near Rochester, N. Y., with of the men killed it. The place where great success. This truck will han- the snake was found had been forty- dle three times as much farm produce five years ago and on thesurface was in a day as a team. j two feet of trap rock and hard ma- The vacuum process is now used to cadam. It is believed the snake had clean railway coaches. been buried there for nearly ahalf Stockholm, Sweden, has more tele- century. phones in proportion to the popula- tion than any other city. BUTLER, MO. with some of the largest sales i the state, gives me a thorough sales business. ON SA tised. Terms reasonable. CHARLEY BEARD AUCTIONEER 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-|® ing made a majority of the larg- est and best sales in this section, as also having been connected 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 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- See or write me for dates. WRITE, OR PHONE 53 AT MY EXPENSE Nearly a quarter of a million dollars worth of electrical apparatus was shipped from the United States to the Philippines last year. Chicago is installing telephones at the rate of about 2500 a month. The Tauern tunnel in Austria is to be ventilated by electric fans. The Wanamaker stores in New York and Philadelphia are to be con- nected by wireless. —— Great Falls, S. C., will begin: the! | manufacture of atmospheric fertilizere | ona large scale. $200,000 worth of | machinery will soon be installed. Air! isto be forced through an electric| furnace producing nitric acid and this acid applied to limestone will give | nitrate of lime, an excellent fertilizer. The estimated available water-pow- erin New York State is one anda j half million horse-power, of which only two-thirds has been developed. | Siberia and Russia will be connect- | ed by wireless. There is a project afoot to dam the waters of the Grand Canyon of Colo- rado, erecting a dam 700 feet high, and developing 1,500,000 horse-pow- er. The site for the dam is in Arizona near the Colorado line and the project will require $2,000,000, n knowledge and experience of the LE DAY. Percheron Stallions, Mares, & Fillies Next year telephone connections will be estab! i direct between New York and Denver, a distance of 2200 miles, the longest long distance *phone in the word, There are more than three hundred thousand telephones in greater New York. Asia Minor abounds in good water- powers suitable for electrical devel- opment. _ Twoofthe largest electrical genera- tors ever built are now being erected at Necaxa, Mexico, by the General Electric Company. Each generator 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 Issues Time Deposit six or twelve months, interest. The Walton Trust Secy. + fund and ‘Gndlvidea ‘pre account, YOUR PATRONAGE SOLICITED ona payable bearing five per cen SAFER. the largest Wm. E. Walton, Pres. Care of a Watch. Be careful of your watch; it is too delicate an article to be roughly handled. One wonders sometimes how some people’s watches last them more than a month or two, judging from the treatment they re-/ ceive. | Never get into the habit of holding the stem and winding the watch; al- ways hold the watch and wind the stem. If you will try both ways, you will see what is meant, and perhaps | find that you have a bad habit to cure yourself of. Moreover, wind the watch as nearly as possible at the same time every day. It is bad fora timepiece to be wound too frequently | or to be allowed to run down entire- ly. At night either hang the watch up— | small watchstands come for the pur- pose, ora tiny yet firm brass hook on the wall will do as well—or, if you lay it down, see that there is some soft article under it. Above all, do not keep it in too hot or too cold a place, in spite of all the watchmakers will tell you about the temperature | tests to which their wares have been | subjected. | Do not carry a watch around loose in a bag or pocketbook. If neither | fob, chatelaine or chain is.-possible | with the gown you are wearing, pin | the watch firmly under your dress. The leather wristband with the watch set into it is bad for the watch. It is only too likely to bump against every- thing you touch. About once a year send your watch to be cleaned and regulated. Handle it carefully otherwise, and it will be a prompt and efficient servant for generations.—K. C. Post. It Saved His Leg. “All thought I'd lose my leg,’ writes J. A. Swensen, of Watertown, | Wis. “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, | The Southern Power Company at) scalds, cuts and piles. 25¢ at F.T. | corbing W Clay’s. | Indictment is Like Sermon. | From the Boston Post. Quaint legal forms customary in| capital cases in the federal courts of | this state were brought to light at the arraignment of Bogos Mucksian of Lowell before Judge Dodge in the Unitsd States District Court. It was on an indictment charging him with! murder in the first degree. | One of the quaintest phrases heard | at the arraignment occurred in the | reading of the indictment, wherein | the grand jury accused Mucksian of | murderous assault, “‘noti having the| fear of God before his eyes, but be- | ing moved and reduced by the insti- | gation of the devil.” } Mucksian pleaded not guilty to the indictment, which read in spots like a, sermon. Then Clerk Gilman asked, “How will you be tried, by God and your country?’’ and on receiving a reply in the affirmative, he said, ‘‘God send you a good deliverance.”’ Mastodon’s Bones Unearthed. Sterling, Ill., Nov. 7.—Patrons of the skeleton of a mastodon were found on the James McGinn farm, south of this city. Two tusks were unearthed, one fifty-three inches long. The other was somewhat decayed and a large| 13th day, Monday, November 28th | Not Sisters and again ial, and answered in a plain envelope. Address: Dispensary Medicc Associgtion ion, Dr. R.V. Pierce, Pres., Buffalo, N.Y. Probate Court Docket Novem: | 4 Term. : ber, 1910, Term. MISSOURI Estate. Administrator or Executor. ] Ist day, Monday, November 14th. | PACIFIC Gee Jasa Jno W Jamison IRON T JasJ Mahala J Turner® Dagea Wiivar s Wesley Denton | MOUNTAIN Baldwin Chas W CA Denton Cole Elizabeth John C Hayes Pipes Sarah E JN Pipes 2nd day, Tuesday, November 15th. Dobbins Samuel C Mary J Woody | Missouri Pacific Time Table —— heen BUTLER STATION. Howard Wm A JB Mucke Williamson E R 8 C Willlameon Following is corrected time card to 3rd day, Wednesday, November 16th date: Kemper AS Fannie T Kemper NORTH. Kirk Barak W W Ferguson No. 206 Kansas City Accommodation. foreman Albert Margaret Foreman | Ho. Fr ot Levis & i a all & Bx. Vandruf Marilla J Miller Vandraff | Kanene City Stock... Schmidt Jessie F JH Schmidt Looal Freight...... .... 4th day, Thursday, November 17th Maik cme tae Elgert Julius E Mary B Elgert #0 bg cK ree aa S Ex . p ’ jo. 205 Nevada Accommodation. pail day seabed JW Samson N° 391 (Loval PrelgMR) run. : SOUTH, Saddler Mary O JA8adiler Epperson Fredrick O WJ Reese INTERSTATE. Robbios Asa D Olive Robbins WES’. » Bj y Ni No, 693 Madison Local Freight.......... 7:458 m, 5th day, Firday, November 18th N0°s'Mfadison Accommodation. 1:15pm. Argen'right Rebeces P Albert Argenbright EAST. Burk Joun H Chas 1 Bork . x 633 Butler Accommodation... 12:01 p. m. Hein urg Harmon Minnie Mier No. 694 Butler Local Freight............ 5:00 p.m, Miller Wm Katharan & WF Miller, Freight trains Nos, 83 and 64 carry passen- re on Interstate Division, No other freight rains carry passengers All freight for forwarding must be at depot not later than elev-n o’c\ock a m. or be held tor following days torwarding. Freight for Interstate Division must be delivered before five o’clock p. m, No freight billed for this train in morning, E.u. VARDERVOOR, gent. 6th day, Saturday, November 19th JW Darby W O Jackson SW Maxey W D Corbin Corbin Nancy W DCorbin 7th day, Monday, November 21st Miller Henderson Daviels John E O'Neal Burton W Ward F G Cynthia W Ward | S il as Jones Lucretia je i Baha OR. I, M. NORRIS, Coote Conant nan Seam Eye, Ear and Throat Specialist mer as a jancan 1 whit 2s poieohateal — Fite a. south x 8th day, Tuesday, November 22nd | ot over Star Bakery. haber Nancy J AH Moore! iMlame Mary J 8 Mell Hemmer Antes Mary ttammer/ OR, J. M, CHRISTY Were wane ; “ in Diseases ot Women and Children a Specialty Office over A. H. Culver Furn. CO. MISSOURI House Phone 10 Ryan JJ Nellie Welch and Daisey Stanley . BUTLER_ - 9th day, Wednesday, November 23rd Office Phone 20 Holsclaw C KlzaJ White MocClenney E L Mary K McClenny — - Ford David 88 Fox Forbes $ ¥ Josephine Forbes OR. ). T. HULL Ochener Joseph Antone Joseph Ochsner Dentist Davis Riley @Mary Davis ‘Entrance same that leads to Stew- 20th day, Thursday, November 24th ard’s Studio. Cometock A J Robert C Chapel!’ North side square _ Butler, Missouri Ferrell Catharine WS Ferrell _ . ieniiioaaoceaate lect Fry TJ ‘ Thos J Smith ; Stilwell J P W F Stilwell OR. H, M, CANNON Pyle K DK Walker DENTIST * Butler, Missouri East Side of the Square Phone No. 312 Arfman Mary LA Arfman Guardian’s and Curator’s Docket. | llth day, Friday, November 25th Smith Glen W Thomas J Hockett | Lee John C and Joseph Jno D Moore cay | Holloway Gloyd Fay et al JroU Hayes T. C. BOULWARE | Obler Carl H W T Ohler Physician & Surgeon Office North Side Square, Butler, Mo. Diseases of women and chil- dren a specialty. | Howard Wm J et al Annie Howard 12th day, Saturday, November 26th Brown Wm O et al James O Brown | Wade Mahala E WH¥r zee; Stayton Esther Ruth et al Willie I Yeaes Fu) ees | RequaC Bruce Beli Requa B, F. JETER, Epp-reon Wm Earl Mipnie P Epp reon | Attorney at Law Notary Public { Butler. Telephi 4 ih cient We venty | Part was missing. Conard Martha J et al Ross Conara | East Side Squ: Phone 186 125, es 7 = onan Ne on - ogi than twenty There were several ribs and What | Donlap Boy rey al . Frask alla | ey meoUR, “syn gg sel steel mills at iS Delieved to be a portion of the jaw. | sranane omg se deat : : |The portions of the skeleton were! prow arch! Mary E Frow | oh severe Bere = Sy © | discovered two and a half feet below | Colbert Ceelh et at CA Deaton Sheriff's Sale io Partiston land will develop om 15,000 | the surface of the ground. 14th day, Tuesday, November 29th J ¥ Rom, Plaintis, | wie - - Kinsler Frank ot al Jno C Hayes | Hellen Thomas, Floren eB. | horse-power. aay ‘ Colton Geo Het al ‘Jno C Ha: Ross, Ore Allen, KB. Ross, Don't Break Dow preteens oe io tere an 3 Don't Break Down. othere interested i the state of Sami psp ted J amc T h e W a l to n T ru st fen eae on a A, vital organs, mminitaratrix of sald ate'e, tatend tomake @nal 15th day, Wednesday, November 30 ‘break downs. You can't over-tax | G'umtg.ercbale Court, ta, Bates county, State | Arnold J F | \ Of Missouri, to be held at Bu'lor Missouri, on | sehape! r Ruben etal J Catharine Schapeler C stomach, liver, kidneys, bowels or| the 4th day of November 1010 tak ise om pa ny, nerves wi danger to! si-s é ‘Aamintstratrix. |] |yourself. If you are weak or run- Butler, Missourt | dows, oF under strain of any kind, | Notice of Final Settlement. ‘ Capital. : Sbé.b00.0 || | tonic “ Mrs. + F Van de | | Notes ts hereb ar to sll, creditors and OpEd 6s 04, Ge 60.5 04 Osc vdccctves 000.00 | Sande, Kirkland, » Writes: ate taserette Lh chabinin ceeailiees. Surplus Fund and Und. Profits....$87,500.00 “That I did not break down, while wre eudenst,, (nseee. to make Seal onto Always has money te loan at lowest interest We own and - up with the records com guaranteed. 50c at F. T. Clay's. Abstract le and town _ he foes in Bates county. Will furnish reliable ab- Notice of Final Settlement. stracts on short

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