The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, January 19, 1911, Page 6

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C. E. Robbins Bates County’s Leading Auctioneer. Phone No. 11 SALES MADE ANYWHERE I outsell other men because I give my whole time and attention to the auction business. I am in touch with stock men every where who want to buy what you have to sell. Annually make more sales than all the other auctioneers in Bates county. See me before mak- ing dates. Terms reasonable. Free booklet on How to Prepare for a Sale. Sale clerks furnished on application. C. E. ROBBINS Butler, Mo. C. W. Hess THE PRESCRIPTION DRUG STORE ~REXALL GOODS STOCK REMEDY ~ DUVALL-PERCIVAL TRUST 60. 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. ' Investments reasonable interest on good security. We pay ' interest on time deposits. Wl 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. W. F. DUVALL, President, Arthur Duvall, Treasurer. ARN INT Ne NE TEES | 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. -W.Barnhbhart "TIS TIME YOU WERE THINKING OF THAT WINTER TRIP Daily, from October 25th to April 30th we will sell round-trip tickets at greatly reduced rates @* Florida, Louisiana Mexico R Kindly ask our nearest agent for information ~ regarding these trips, or write _ the undersigned. | SELECT SOIL FOR HOTBEDS We will loan your idle money for you, securing you ||| 1uantity of wood’s earth, and fine scrap- Can Be Used on Buliding Foundation or in Setting Out Orchard Trees and Vines. “With tho instrument invented by W. Wolcott of Healdsburg, Cal., and here IMustrated, one may readily square and level the foundations of a build- | ing. The device may also be used for Combined Level and Square. setting out orchard trees and vines, and lining them in a perfect rectangle, The device comprises a pair of tele scopes, disposed at right angles to each other and each furnished with a spirit evel, says the Scientific Amerl- can. The telescopes are mounted on /@ frame, which in turn is supported on a cable, capable of accurate adjust- ment with respect to a base plate. ‘he table is graduated to indicate the vari- ations of the frame plate from normal position. FLOWER SHELF FOR KITCHEN | Handy Little Device May Be Used for Plants or Seedlings—How It Is Made. A handy device for flowers or seed- | lings is made by securing a plank of serviceable size to the window casings, writes Lizzie Bond of Indiana in Farm and Home. Hang it by a couple of strong hinges on the under. side of Kitchen Flower Shelf. plank, and support’ it by large wires held by screw-eyes to shelf and casing, as shown in the illustration. Before Putting Into Frames Heap Should Be Cu Down, Well Mixed and Run Through Screen. Soil for use in hotbeds and cold jframes should be hauled and placed |under cover for next spring’s use. | Earth from an old pasture or from {| the fence row, mixed with an equal jings from the stable yard, or from the bottom of manure heaps, well | mixed together and piled in a round: | éd heap, will be in nice condition tor | use in the frames or in the green house. If piled out of doors, the heap should be covered with boards to keep the earth dry. Before putting into the frames the heap should be cut down, well mixed and run through the sand screen. It will take about one bushel of sifted earth for each | 8x6 sash. | Gardeners and florists’ use large quantities of such earth to cover their choice flower and vegetable seeds, This soil, being light and fine, the del- icate plants can break through this earth covering without injury. If the soil is heavy, roadside sand should be added and the whole thoroughly mixed before it is used. Chrysanthemum cutting will take {root in pure sand within two to four weeks. i Portulacas are almost without rivals for brilllancy among the low-growing plants. A large proportion of the low priced rose plants sold in the east are raised n California. Potatoes make a good orchard crop, and the season of culture is just about what the trees require. a viney nature, are easily thrown out of balance by improper fertilizing. An orchard sprayed for the San Jose scale has a’much healthier and better appearance tiian one not 80 treated. Plant a piece of 21d pasture to good timber trees for the benefit of the boy. It will become the best part of the farm. - The best time to kill the plant lice infesting orchard trees and shrubbery ig just before the buds open in the are adapted to the t, it is nearly as pe Small fruits, and especially those of |. Common and Uncleanly Habit of Big Animals and Young Heifers: Is Effectively Cured. In modern barns where cows are tied with ‘the movable stanchions, the herdsman is not much bothered with their habit of standing in the gutter; but where the cows are tied with chains’ or stationary stanchions, it is common with big cows or young heif- jers just, new into the stall, says a 4 writer in the Country Gentleman. It is most irritating to come in every morning and find a cow has been End of Stall. standing in the gutter and making a filth of the'stall when she steps out of it, and then lying down and swish- ing her tail in the mess. I have tried the following, and fing that with young heifers it-cures them of the habit in a very short time, and sometimes old cow® can be cured: You get two pieces of 2 by 4-inch and cut them to fit your gutter as shown; angle off one end so that the cow does not lie on a sharp corner; make two half diamond cuts and set in your cross pieces, which are made of 3 by 8-inch, and nail securely. If your gut- ter is very wide, you may have to put in three pieces of strip, as an old- fashioned cow will soon find she can get her feet down between the strips, but I have never seen a cow stand on the strips. If you have two cows standing together that have this trick, you can make your strips long enough for them both and put an extra 2 by 4-inch piece in the center. If you Strips in Stall. lift the rack back to the wall when turning out the cows, and if it is well made it will last a long time. | Song Healthy Worn is strong and healthy in a womenly a eee ut but little suffering. The in the fact that the many women suffer fro’ ly feminine organi! disease of the distinctly feminine ied. This can be ,, mothe trouble lies m2 kness and m and are unfitted | Witn ss my band th 19. for motherhood. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription . Cures the weaknesses end disorders of women. Ite ects directly on the delicate and impo: organs concerned in motherhood, making them healthy, strong, vigorous, virile and elastic. ‘Favorite Prescription’ benishes the indispositions of the sa of oe and makes baby’s advent easy aod almost painless. It quickens end. vitalizes the pair ‘and insures ia angel ee robust baby. , to its marvelous merits. It Makes Weak Woaen Strong. It Makes Sick Honest druggists do not offer substitutes, as good.’’ Accept no secret nostrum contains not a drop of alcohol and no! and urge them upon you as in place of this son-secret remedy. ta grain of hebit-forming of injurious feminine - Thousands of women have Women Welt: “ Lar drugs. Is @ pure glyceric extract of healing, native American roots, en : ee ————————— Notice of Trustee’s Sale. Whereas, William F Freeman and ¥ora | Freeman, hie wife, by their certain deed of trust. bearing date January 1 193, and rec- orded in the office of the Recorder of Deeds | within and for Bates county, Missouri, on the | 28th ‘ay of Janaary, 1908, in trust deed book 208, at page 221, conveyed to W, (. Stonebrak- er as trustee the following described real estare in the County of Bates and State of Missouri, )- wit; The south balf of the northeast aera of section seventeen (17), ‘ownship thirty-nine (39), range thirty-three (33), containing eighty (80) acres more or lees, which seid deed of trust was given to s-cure the payment of a certain notc therein described, and which said note is now peat due and remains unpaid. Whereas, itis provided in and by the terms of asia deed of trust that in case of default being mate in the payment of *the debt evidenced by note or any par: of the same, when the eai ould become due, the under- signed tru fter having sdvertieed the time, terms and place of sale as provided in said deed of trust might sell the real estate herein described for the purpose of securing the payment of the debt secured thereir and thereby. Wh reas, it is provided in said ot trast that in case of the absence state of the ‘rustee named therein, Stonebraker, the then acting sheriff of county, should execute the powers of therein conferred, and said W. C. Stonebri er being now absent from the State of Missouri, Now therefore in pursuance of the terms of the deed of trust aforesaid and at the request of the legal holier of the note secured there- by, public notice is hereby given that the un- dersigoed sheriff of Bates county, Miesouri on Thaureday the 26 h day of January, 1911, will offer for ssle and sell at public ontecry to the hizhest bidder for cash the real estat- hereinbefore describe for the purp se of ri ing money tu pay off and discharge the debt secured there! y together with the expens-s and costs of making said sale. Said sale tobe made at the east front door of the Court House ip Batler, Bates Coy Missouri. is 4th day of W J. BULLOCK, Sheriff and Acting Trustee, | No 210 Southwest Li: No, 209 South weet Li No, 207 No, 694 Butler Local gers on Interstate Di Jannary, ese not later fl for following days CARING FOR BUTTER WORKER To Get Rid of Adhering Grease Use Certain Quantity of Hydro- chloric Acid Diluted, Every butter maker knows the im- portance of using a good butter work- er. Without it the butter habitually contains too much water, probably too large a quantity of casein. The chief point of the butter work- er is to get the water out and also | to enable the produce to be made up| into a good and consistent sample. But trouble is often caused by the fact of the butter adhering to the er, arising from a want of clean- in in that utensil. The chief cause of this adherence | is that the wood {is saturated with the asy, material owing efiher to in- complete washing or the water not being hot enough. To get rid of this grease use a cer- tain quantity of hydrochloric acid di- luted with four times its quantity of water. This should cover the worker for twelve hours and then it should be] thoroughly scrubbed, then washed in boiling water and finally recelve a cold douche. Cheese-making requires some time. Cleanliness and feeding are two im- portant points. A clean, dry cellar is a very geod place to ripen the cheese. The matter of temperature churning is a vexing question. A person with a separator has sev- eral advantages in handling milk. Few farmers or dairymen fully un- derstand all the profits from dairying. An, {mportant point is the care of the churn, milk pails‘and butter bowl. The separator is made for one spe- cific purposs—that is of skimming milk. Most cream separators are so con- structed that they can be made to last a long time. In dairying, where whole milk is sold, manure is still a product that should be considered. Considering both its food and tonic properties, buttermilk may be consid- ered cheap at 10 cents per quart. © ‘When all ‘has been said conditions determine what kind of animals are for 1 ; Contrivance That Takes Top Off Bot: | | fiveo’clock p. m, train in morning. VERY USEFUL CAN OPENER deed ; No, 208 St. Louis & K. / MISSOURI PACIFIC IRON MOUNTAIN / Missouri Pacific Time Table BUTLER STATION. January 12, 1911 NORTH. No, 206 Kansas City Accommodation. 6:15 8. m. . C. Mail & E: 12;40 p m. imited. 4 15 p,m. SOUTH. ited... K. 0. & Joplin Mail & E: No, 205 Nevada Accommodatio: No, 291 (Local Freight)....... INTERSTATE. WEST. No. 698 Madison Local Freight, No 87 Madison Accomm EAST. No. 688 Butler Accommodation. ation. Freight Freight trains Nos. 693 and 694 carry paseen- iviaion. No other freight trains carry passengers. All (a for forwarding must be at depot jan eleven o’ciock a m.or be held forwarding. Freight for Interstate Division must be delivered before No freight billed for this E, U. VANDERVOORT, nt. Ss tles and Has a Corkscrew Eye, Ear and Besides. A can opener that is a regular cab- 49-tf inet of tools has been designed by a : OR. J. M. NORRIS, Throat Specialist | Eyes Tested Free and Glasses Prop- erly Fitted. Office on south side over Star Bakery. New York man. In addition to open-; ing tin cans and boxes, this imple-| ment will remove the paper tops from | milk bottles and the crown caps from | beer botties, take out the at corks from mustard bottles and jars and} BUTLER draw the cork of auy other kind of | Office Phone 20 Diseases of Women DR. J. M. CHRISTY and Children a Specialty | Office over A. H. Culver Furn:-CO. MISSOURI House Phone 10 bottle. In general appearance the | —— = col resembles s her cai n- | col resembles wort other can open- | oR. I}; T. RULL Dentist ' Entrance same that leads to Stew- ard’ | North side square DR. H. M. CANNON | | | Butler East Side ‘Mo. | dren a specialty. 's Studio. Butler, Missouri DENTIST ', Missouri of the Square Phone No. 312 ~—-T. G. BOULWARE | Physician & Surgeon Office North Side’ Square, Butler, Diseases of women and chil- | B, F Attorney at La = | ers, but there is a spiked projection above the main blade and a hook in the rear of it. This upper spike is} . for lifting out milk bottle caps, which are often hard to get out with the fingers or a fork ,and for extracting the flat corks, for which it is scarcely worth while to use a corkscrew. The corkscrew, by the way, is hinged to the tool and folds into the handle when not in use. The hook is for re- moving the caps from beer and soft- drink bottles. As a matter of fact, this implement is more of a bottle | exbibited within opener than a can opener. ~v pfahecs® Notice ie hereb: ln, deceased, have in Bates county, 26thiday of Decembe: All persons havin; sre requirod to ©: ey » zis Po, or ma tot such 6 H-t” The Famous most profitable for a farmer to keep. Intensive. dairymen hold that noth; ing but the distinct dairy type of cow can be profitably ‘used in niodern dairying. - . After salt is properly mixed in the should be molded into one pound. and wrapped in a neat, Attractive package. eyes of those sitting far from it. The Rayo Lamp is constructed to give oe panics bashes white light. Every eta’ increases its light-gi' value has Migs Hong ogarene et alia thai $16 or even thee Lonps cae ak | East Side Square BUTLER, MISSOURI dereigned, by the Bates County Probate Court aa Missouri, ‘4 ing date ear from the Saintes ‘and if sais claims be . JETER, Notary Public Phone 186 Ww Notice. given, that istration upon che astate of letters of admin- Sarah E, Catter- b-en granted to the un- the r, 2910, ‘ vit, them to me for sllow date of sald let- not from the dateot the ‘oboe they will be forever ELLEN E CATTERLIN Adminiotretrix.

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