The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, December 1, 1910, Page 8

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C. E. Robbins THE SUCCESSFUL Auctioneer LIVE Annually making STOCK AND FARM SALES A SPECIALTY 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 lowa in-August. Call on or address me at Butler, Mo. Phone 11. Cc. BEB. ROBBINS. REZALL STORE Eiess’ Stock Dip $1.00 Per Gallon 5 Gallons 75c per gallon. 10 Gallons 65c per gallon. SPECIAL BARGAIN ON TWO DIP TANKS 14!; oz. Bar Pure Castile Soap !5c HESS The REXALL Store BUTLER, MISSOURI. = OY ‘Alabama FARMERS BANK BUILDING, BUTLER, MO. Farm Loans Abstracts examine and perfect titles to same. Investments interest on time deposits. W. F. DUVALL, President, Arthur Duvall, Treasurer. We have money to loan on real estate at a low rate of interest with privilege to pay at any time. J. B. DUVALL, Vice-President, W. D. Yates, Title Examiner. ‘TIS TIME YOU WERE Daily, from October 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. THINKING OF THAT INTER TRIP 25th to April 30th we will sell round-trip tickets at greatly reduced rates Cuba MISSO Florida, PACIF MOUNT Kindly ask our nearest agent for information regarding these trips, or write the undersigned. , Dist. Pas. Agt || IQON Mississippi URI New Mexico IC South Carolina ' Tennessee \IN and Texas ALL-PERCIVAL TRUST C0. CASH CAPITAL, $50,000. | | Some Unique Gardening Methods Which Have Brought Large Finan- clal Returne—Worth Copying. (By M. F. RITTENHOUSE.) j A Chinese market-gardener of our | town who has grown rich at his bust | ness has some very unique methods, but which are worth copying, for his gardens, both artistically and finan- ; clally, are a great success He saves his squash and pumpkin | seeds for the next year's planting | by the simple process of keeping the | squash or pumpkin that especially strikes his fancy in a cool, dry place | until the next planting season. Then he plants them with pieces of the FAT is ge | SQ | it te-e-bad-plan to allow a draft on | | CHINESE “TRICKS OF TRADE” VENTILATING A COW STABLE | Bad Plan to Allow Draft to Play on Animais in Barn, Yet Fresh Air ls Necesary. Do you feel weak, tired, despondent, aches, coated tongue, bitter or bad — 1 | the cows while stabled At the same poor or variable appetite, nausea at symptoms P time it is necessary to get plenty of The accompanying illus ventilation | ful habit-forming drugs. What Ails You **heart-burn,”’ belching of gas, acid risings in throat after eating, stomach gnaw or burn, foul breath, dizzy spells, If you have any considerable number of the have frequent head- taste in morning, times and kindred The ‘Golden Medical Discovery”’ is not a patent medicine or secret nostrum, 2 full list of its ingredients being printed on its bottle-wrapper and attested under oath. A glance at these will show that it contains no alcohol, or harm- It is a fluid extract — ‘oigl gabe. triple-refined rine, of proper strength, from the roots of native American medical, gre plants. Wortd’s Dispensary Medical Association, Props., Buffalo, N. Y, sia ; = o | | | ‘Col. Wetmore Dies; Was Hit by Wagon. | Colonel Moses C. Wetmore, retired capitalist and tobacco manufacturer, | died atthe Jewish Hospital in St. Louis | jat 3 o’clock Saturday afternoon. He| was injured Wednesday by a wagon | knocking him down and running} over him. His right hip and should- | er were fractured, and he sustained | jconcussion of the brain. He never regained consciousness. | Letting In Pure Alr. | — ; vation shows a method that | have used In my new dairy barn which has proved very satisfactory, writes A. C, Hallway in Farm and Home. | The window, a, is hinged at the bot- Col. Wetmore was Democratic Na- jtom and can be opened from the top, | tional Committeeman from Missouri, thus allowing the air to come in at! and had been in poor health before | the top without a draft. The window |the accident. He was 64 years old, | {s held open at the proper distance by | oe ere | , ad, : jand the shock of his injuries was | | a plece of thin strap iron with a num- | “ | | ber of slits cut In it, as shown at b.|more than his strength could over-| These slits fit into a small piece of | come, strap tron, c, on top of the window Col. Wetmore became widely | known by his fight waged against {the Tobacco Trust in 1899, At that | time he was president of the Liggett | No Reason Why Example of Farmer & Myers Tobacco Company. | Cannot Be Followed—Milk Others | ‘Tho trust for several years carried wise Be Wasted. | * : ar_and finally won, merging MAKE BUTTER IN CITY HOMES / MISSOURI | 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 Louls & K. C. Mail & Ex.12:3¢ p m, N Southwest Limited.............. 1106p, m, Kanene Clty Stok... ccc to 8.40 P.M, Looal Freight... 9:00 p. m, SOUTH, No, 209 Southwest Limited sane OH 7K © & Joplin Mall & Ex... 12 No, 205 Nevada Accommodation... No. 291 (Loval Freight)... ccs INTERSTATE, Preserve Onions In Winter. | pulp adhering, and they appear above | ground with mushroom-like prompt: | ness | His muskimelon seed, he ties up in |@ bag of coarse burlap, and covers this loosely with rich soil, allowing the seeds to sprout before planting them He also preserves his cucumber seeds in the cucumber, which he | coats carefully with paraffine as soon | a8 pulled from the vine. \]| When he irrigates bis potatoes (and | | We have a complete set of Abstract Books and will fur- | nish abstracts to any real estate in Bates county and We will loan your idle money for you, securing you | reasonable interest on good security. We pay | he raises two crops on the same land each year) he waters long and deep- ly; and his potatoes never grow near enough to the surface to get sun- burned, as do those of the inexperi enced gardeners who lightly sprinkle the surface of their potato patch as scantily and as often as they sprin kle their lettuce beds. There is no question as to the su- periority in size and quality of the deep-grown potato over those grown close to the surface His beet-seed are soaked in water | for at least forty-eight hours before planting. He sets them to soak in warm water and during the daytime keeps the vesvel containing them as much {fn the sunshine as possible I have never yet seen him throw away a young plant of any description He merely transplants them, and I do not believe it an exaggeration to say that nine-tenths of the plants sur. | vive and flourish, for he is surely a) past master in the art--for it is an| art—of transplanting. For example, when his lettuce | Plants grow to about the height of | two inches, he thins out the bed and clipping off about an inch of the root tip of each plant he pulls up, he re plants in long rows, and the trans planted lettuce makes a more rapid | and larger growth than the plants | which he has left undisturbed. The replanted, or rather trans. planted lettuce with its clipped roots, grows to such enormous heads that at a short distance they remind one of thrifty cabbage rows. He never uproots the head lettuce he markets. Instead he leaves the stalks in the ground and assiduously waters and cultivates them where upon they produce another head in| about half the time required for the| first head to reach a marketable size. | His beet plants are transplanted | with clipped roots in precisely the| same manner as the lettuce | His onions, which are Invariably started from the seed (he refuses to use sets), are transplanted after hav- ing their roots clipped and grow to be larger in circumference than the or. dinary saucer. He also beheads his cabbage, leav- | ing the stalk to grow. He cuts slight | 498: nicks or gashes in the growing stalk. which watered and tended produces & second growth that are in appear- ance fair imitations of brussels sprouts and quite as good to eat. His faith in the forcing powers of warm water {is sublime. I have known him to heat water~for his radishes in the chill days of spring, testing its temperature as carefully as {f pre paring a baby's bath. He ts equally expert in rooting rose enttings. This he does during the en tire year, but he considers August the most auspicious month. though 1 doubt if he could give a reason for thinking s0. He plants his cuttings by thrusting | zenith of prices, and with butter this *| amount of fat at all times. the St. Louis factory with the Amer- |ican Tobacco Company. Against the | president’s wishes the company ac- | cepted $15,000,000 from the trust. Colonel Wetmore then formed the | M. C. Wetmore Tobacco Company to | fight the trust. When he became ill, | two years later, he was forced to| again give in to the trust. | Since 1895 he had been a close per- sonal friend of William Jennings Bryan. The two had been in the habit of hunting on Colonel Wet- more’s 6,000 acres of hunting pre- serve in Taney county, Missouri, each fall. the finest in the country, and its pro- prietor took much pride in it. He had the preserve well stocked with deer. The estate left by Colonel Wetmore is in the neighborhood of $5,000,000. He was interested in several financial institutions and the real estate com- | pany which built the Planters Hotel. Colonel Wetmore was a native of Nokomis, Fayette county, Ill.—Re- public. There seems to be no reason why |-the clty dweller should not follow the example of the farmer in making his own butter, says Popular Mechanics. Cream, it {s true, is much higher in the city than in the country, but so is butter. With such a churn as shown in the ‘Illustration the housekeeper can take the cream which sours and {s oth- Churn for City Homes. erwise often wasted and turn it into @ pound or half of butter in from two to five minutes. Demand for Good Butter, There is such a thing as getting a first-class price steadily for butter of ordinary grade. It must be held up to the standard; texture, flavor and neat- ness of packing are all to be con- sidered if the best price is to be unt- formly obtained. A first quality in all farm products is what reaches the Ends Winter’s Troubles. To many, winter is a season of trouble. The frost bitten toes and fingers, chapped hands and lips, chil- blains, cold sores, red and rough skins, prove this. But such troubles | fly before Bucklen’s Arnica Salve. Atrial convenes. Greatest healer of burns, boils, piles, cuts, sores, eczema and sprains. Only 25c at F. | T. Clay’s. : Aw! What’s the Use? | Weep and you’re called a baby, Laugh and you’re called a fool, Yield and you're called a coward, | is especially true. The cow that can’t feed is sure to test the fence. Do not let the summer milkers run down in condition, and go into winter quarters thin in flesh. Give the cows a chance to get un- der the shed every night now. If too cold, keep them in the stable. The best cows are never cheap, and are seldom for sale; so it pays to give the heifer calves the best of care. Never send a boy or dog to bring rt the cows from the pasture unless you | souri are very well acquainted with - your Order of Publication. STATE OF MISSOURI, } ,, County of Bates. In the Cir uit Court, October term, 1910. ber 28rd, 1910 ard Trout, Plaintiff, ve. t, Defendant. seine at thle day comes, the date tis hereln by Vit, by meng ook that defendant, Jos-h H heretofore on M10, Aled his petition 1g that defendant is of Missouri tat ered by the court that wll ok Lats arg by Aposrng ah that object and Whereupon it is said defendant be ‘A quart of milk by actual chemical tif has analysis, is said to possess as much nutritive value as a pound of beef- steak. If the skim milk is fed at home practically all the fertilizing constitu ents of the feed used may be turned back to the soil. Keep the bearings clean, and well ofled, and the machine level and your separator will run easier, do bet- ter work and last longer. The dry cow should have a little or of] meal the same as the milk- er. She should always be in a good condition at calving time. * Some people believe that the feed governs the fat content, but a cow In & norma! condition will give the same 1, Setendant ‘on jour notes, fully desoribed in plaintif’s petition, the am unt eo paid b Dlaintif® as aforesaid for which jadgment (A yaad Big ceata (ot.0) and ptarent theres cen' , and ‘Di on; and tar the yy Of the defendant been attached (yay By careful selection the’ quality of even common dairy cows may be greatly improved and their average | | Sow of milk. materially increased. +No. 69 This preserve is one of| . East Side Square No 37 Madison No 633 Butler Accommodation. 12:01 p. m. No. 604 Butler Local treight............ 6:00 p.m, Freight tring Nos, 693 and 694 carry passen- gers on Interstate Diviaion, No other freight trains carry passengers All treight for forwarding must be at depot not later than elev n o’c ock a m or be held tor Felewie dave jorwarding. fr-ight for Int-ratate Division must be delivered before fiveo’clock p. m, No freight willed for this train in morning, E. u, VaNDERVOORT, 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. 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 Phone 186 Stand and you’re called a mule, | cessful dairyman is jt J tan 4) cies esis Smile and they’ll call you silly, | BUTLER, MISSOURI Plenty of sunlight in the cow stable; Frown and they call you gruff, 5 ba! od a alia Put on a front like a millionaire— Notice. will tahoe get them) “And some guy calls your bluff! Notics is! ereby given, that the undersign-d pocey 2) qd | W. B. Kerr in Puck. | Stee @° ore sobnrone' wortes.Brvereoned mind on the 20th day of October, 1910, by the Prohate Court of Bates County, Mi all persone havi required to diato of this publica sor they 6B is lo: or al barred. JOHN Cc. {iseouri t aald o-tat perro nen H. Guardian and Curator. $3.50 Recipe Cures Weak ; Kidneys, Free. from the ne B4t 0 Relieves Urinary and Kidney Troubles, Backache Strain- ing, Swelling, Etc. Stops Pain in the Bladder, Kidneys and Back.

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