The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, November 24, 1910, Page 6

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isi ~~ C. E. Robbins : sharp hatchet when used in connec-| The instinct of modesty natural to every women is often'e THE SUCCESSFUL ets etting out at the side of the Put Your hatchet on the part Of the| hich seem indelicate. The thought of examination is ab- ee {hoof that you want to cut and then horrent to them, and so they endure in silence « condition Auctioneer through it. : ‘ 7 | for in his offer of FREE consulta: fit than you can do in an hour by the tion by letter, All correspondence is held The next time I go by a certain | paring process. a0 sesrediy contidentiel, Address Dr. R. ¥. LIVE STOCK AND FARM SALES man’s place I will be of a mind to ay Noga » Bettale, B. ¥ A SPECIALTY stop and ask him some questions. 1] Shall Women Vote? De. Peers Ree ae aioe < mates one Annually making more sales than all the auctioneers in Bates county combined, good sales made under adverse conditions. Made the majority of the largest sales in this section of the country last season. Sales made in Missouri, Kansas and Iowa in August. Call on or address me at Butler, Mo. Phone 11. Cc. BE. ROBBINS. FARM FURROWS. Farmer and Stockman Grading late in the fall with a large road, but there’s no getting around | the mud when slip scrapers are used, | ‘and sometimes there is no getting} notice he has a field of corn well! | “set” in fine yellow pumpkins. All| my pumpkins dried up soon after they started, and I would like to know how this man managed to raise them. Said a good farmer to me last week: | “Tam going to soon have every acre of my farm seeded down. A few good milk cow will pasture some of it | off and eat the hay from some more, | : “ - | tried the blacksmith's knife, the rasp | jand almost everything else, but in| my opinion nothing equais~a—good | hit ita smart blow with the hammer. You can do more effective work in| five minutes with that kind of an out-! If they did, millions would vote) Dr. King’s New Life Pills the true remedy for women. For banishing dull, fagged feelings, backache or} headache, constipation, dispelling | colds, imparting appetite and Lew up the system, they're unequaled. Easy, safe, sure. 25c at F. T. Utilizing Odds and Ends. Kuraliet There was once a man who had the lay’s. | puts who gives it a fair trial. It Makes Weak Women Strong, Sick Women Well. You can't afford to accept a secret nostrum as a substitute for this non-alcoholic medicine OF KNOWN COMPOSITION. All progressive poultry raisers now realize the necessity of providing meat of some sort for their laying MISSOURI \ and hogs will pasture the rest.” This | )..hit of attending all the sales within man plans on buying his corn for the’ wach and buying all the odds and/hens during the winter to take the next three years and giving his farm «4s of furniture and small tools that | place of the bugs and worms they | and himself a rest from corn grow-/,.) one wanted. The result was that/ garner when on range in summer, | PACIFIC IRON C.W.HESS REXALL, STORE Exess’ Stock Dip $1.00 Per Gallon ' 5 Gallons 75c per gallon. 10 Gallons 65c per gallon. SPECIAL BARGAIN ON TWO DIP TANKS 1414 0z. Bar Pure Castile Soap 15c Cc. W. HESS The REXALL Store BUTLER, MISSOURI. CASH CAPITAL, $50,000. FARMERS BANK BUILDING, BUTLER, MO. Farm Loans Abstracts 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. We will loan your idle money for you, securing you Investments reasonable interest on good security. We pay interest on time deposits. of interest with privilege to pay at any time. W. F. DUVALL, President, Arthur Duvall, Treasurer. J. B. DUVALL, Vice-President, W. D. Yates, Title Examiner. 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. Telephoné 4 on 125. wv. w. Barnhart TALS AS TS AT. "TIS TIME YOU WERE THINKING OF THAT WINTER T?IP Daily, from October 25th to April 30th we will sell round-trip tickets at greatly reduced rates Mississippi New Mexico | DUVALL-PERCIVAL TRUST CO. We have money to loan on real estate at a low rate | ing. There are thousands of acres of corn land that would be benefitted by the same kind of a change. The other day I ran across a man who is different from the general run clover. His idea is that clover helps field well set to alfalfa you let it same field. A good milk cow sells for as muc as a good-horse used to and a good ‘horse sells for as much | same kind did a few years ago. Sev- |enty-five dollars for a good cow and | | $200 for a horse are no longer sensa- | tional prices at the farm public sale. | Whether a man thinks they are worth it or not, he has to pay it if he buys good ones. | Fruit tree agents are again on the wing. The fruit tree agent prospers most when there has been a good crop of fruit, as folks are then in more of a mood for buying nursery stock. This agent is a sort of neces- sary evil; when a man is in a hurry about some job it is usual for an agent of some sort, most generally the fruit agent, to appear on the scene with a full line of talk, but years after, if a bill of good stuff was bought and has been well taken care of a man does not regret the purchase. The old-fashioned wooden pump has about gone out of style, but for a hand pump, at a stock well, I’ll take) a good wooden pump in preference to | anything else. ‘The only thing against | them was the fact that they would not last, and they were also suscepti- ble to bursting when forgetful ones failed to see that the vent was open about this time of the year. I think the maker of a public sale loses nothing by giving the crowd a good free lunch and plenty of hot coffee. Here of late it has become the custom for ladies aid societies and , other church organizations to sell the | lunch. This is all very well for the church, and I never ate a dinner at a sale when I did not get ‘‘value receiv- ed,’’ but, somehow, I cannot get over the idea that the sale maker helps his sale along by furnishing the dinner free. Nothing would prevent him hiring the church ladies to furnish the dinner. Long ago I got over the old eastern idea of scratching in clover seed. Clover seed needs to be covered, the same as any other seed. Tne best stand I ever had was secured by sow- ing with a grain drill. I shut the feed up tight and then it trickled out out about twelve to fifteen pounds to the acre. The evenness of the stand and the way it established its root system convinced me that drilling clover seed was a success, All stock require some exercise, but I never could see the use of turn- ing out the cows on a raw, chilly day and compelling them to stay out until the last thing at night. It is quite an easy thing to lose out of the milk pail of men, in that he does not care to | raise alfalfa if he can raise good red | the land and you plow it up after two | | years of clover, but if you once get a! right height for seat back. The foot- densed. as time went on every available space in barn, buggy house and wood house | of. the high ‘cost of tan adequate | were stored full of useless old traps, | meat supply, many stint their hens | much to the disgust of the good wo-| man of the family, until she thought| basket. Milk may be utilized as| of a way to make use of part of the|a good substitute for meat. But be-| stuff. She began on the old-fashion- cause of its large water content—87 to | The head- 90 per cent—milk in its natural condi- | ed wooden bedsteads. board was sawed off to make it the board was sawed in two parts and made from odds and ends, usually a Sometimes a denim pad or tufted | which was put on with hinges so that | reached. One of these box seats was put in the hall, one served as wood | and kindling box in the kitchen, an- other was fitted with shelves fora magazine box—the front being hing- ed instead of the seat in this case. Each bedroom had one in it and serv- ed beautifully for shirt waists and the like. After supplying her own home she furnished a few for her neighbors ata fair price. Many of the beds had quite ornamental headboards, others were massive, and all were attractive when put together and finished. The putting together must be done strong- | ly, as the seat is heavy when full of books and the like. Are Your Coat Pockets Like Or This? This? OU never have sag- ging, disreputable coat pockets to be ashamed of, when you wear Clothcraft Clothes. The non-sag- ging pocket is one of the details that give Cloth- craft Clothes their peer- less perfection. The same difference be- tween Clothcraft and ordi- nary clothes is found in the non-breakable coat front — the linings—the trimmings— the snug fitting collar —in every point of es merit. Pure Al-Wool absolutely teed by the maker, and by us—in the fashionable ades and weaves—$10 to by treating milk cows in this way. A neighber of mine does not want to own a high-priced horse, then if agent for information * vs write $25. Wool lasts. Wool keeps its style and shape as long as the suit. You never cushion was made to fit the seat part, | €n). says the Ruralist. But because stint which, in. turn, the egg tion is too bulky and needs to be con- The Dairy Department of the Ore- stand for years and then keep on! made the ends of the seat, while the | gon Agricultural College has experi- growing corn year after year in the | side pieces formed the front of the mented on ways of utilizing milk as a box seat, when sawed to a suitable meat substitute for poultry and rec-| h length. The rest of the seat was ommends the following method: Seta ‘can of skimmilk in a place as two of the | Pine box could be found suitable, and | having a temperature of 75 to 80 de- stained to match the rest of the wood. | grees. In eighteen to twenty-four hours the milk will coagulate thick- pieces the size of large peas or small- the box under the seat was easily | er; set the can in a pail of hot water, stirring the curd until a temperature of 90 to 95 degrees is reached. Hold at this temperature for fifteen or twenty minutes without stirring. Then pour the contents of the can into a cotton sack and hang up where the whey can drain off. The protein content of cottage cheese is very high. In fact, it is nearly as high as fresh meat, there- fore it makes an excellent substitute for grasshoppers and worms. You will observe that by Prof. Dryden’s method the clabber milk is not allow- ed to come even as _ high as “‘blood’’ heat, it is not cooked hard like a bit of rubber, not even as hard as in making cheese at the cheese factory. How’s This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Re- ward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY, ‘0, We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and finan- cially able to carry out any obligations —_s his firm. alding, Kinnan & Marvin, Whole D ists, Toledo; O. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken inter- nally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price 75c per bottle. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Take all's Family Pills for con- stipation. Care of Shredded Fodder. Wallace’s Farmer Farmers who are not accustomed to handling shredded fodder should understand a few things about it. One is that unless it is thoroughly dry it is likely to spoil when put in large quantities in a hay shed or even in a stack out of doors, The danger will be very greatly increased if the shredding is done in damp weather. In this it acts very much like corn fodder. Corn fodder can not be stor- ed in a large stack unless provision is made for ventilation, The same is true and to a greater extent when the fodder is shredded, for the sim- ple reason that it packs closer. It heats more readily than timothy hay, for the reason that it contains does when put in the barn. The same is true of pea hay. In the east- ern states farmers often build their fodder stacks around a tree. They drive in two forked posts, ten feet Then break it up into small | ¥ | MOUNTA Missouri Pacific Time Table BUTLER STATION. Following is corrected time card to | date: | NORTH. No. 2°6 Kansas City Accommodation. 6:03 a, m, | No. 208 8t. Louls & K. C. Mail & Ex.12:3¢ p m, No 210 southwest Limited wow 106 p.m, | Kansae City Stock........ 8.40 p,m, Local Frelgat 0... cece: 9200 Pm, souTH, No. 209 Southwest Limited cove 5204. No 27K © & Joplin Mail & Ex... 12:15 pm, | No, 205 Nevada Accommodation... 9:44 p. m, | No, 291 (Local Freight) ............... 12:86 p.m, | INTERSTATE, | WEST. | No. 698 Madison Local Freight.......... 7:45 m, jo 37 Madison Accommodation... 1:15 p.m, EAST. No 633 Butler Accommodation, ...... 12:01 p. m. | No. 604 Butler Loos! Freight............ 5:00 p. m Freight tr-ina Nos, 603 and 6¥4 carry passen- gere on Interstate Diviaion,\ No other freight ralne carry passengers | _ All freight for forwarding watt be at depot a | Mot later than eleven o’cock a m.or be held for following dave torwarding. Fr: ight for Int-retate Division mast be delive: before five o’clock p. m, No freight billed for this train 1m morning. E. U. VaNpgrvoort, | Agent. OR. J. M. NORRIS, Eye, Ear and Throat Specialist Eyes Tested Free and Glasses Prop- erly Fitted. Office on south side over Star Bakery. 49-tf OR. 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 OR. 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. B, F. JETER, Attorney at Law Notary Public East Side Square Phone 186 BUTLER, MISSOURI i was ‘guardian of the erie ees oe | 1910, by the Probate County, Hinson an persone has js © tate are Geek eeerseans date publicatio or the be forever , C. Hares. it Guardian and Curator. $3.50 Recipe Cures Weak Kidneys, Free. more moisture than timothy usually | Relieves Urinary and Kidney Troubles, Backache Strain- ing, Swelling, Etc. Stops Pain in the Bladder, Kidneys and Back. pie Bier Reine week or soo be-

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