The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, May 25, 1911, Page 6

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REXALL Remedies Are far ahead of any line of remedies we have sold One for Each Ailment and the Formula of same The Rexall Drug Store WANTS YOUR PRESCRIPTIONS You always get the MOST of the BEST for the LEAST money and always secure prescriptions containing fresh pure drugs You select your physician with great care. Do you use the same caution in selecting the druggist to fill your physician’s pre- scriptions? C. W. Hess Financial Statement of the Walton Trust Company ON MAY 15, 1911 ASSETS | LIABILITIES Farm m rtgages given for Capital Stock... borrowed money..... Stocks and Bonds ..... The Rexall Drug Store, Butler, Mo 8 55,000,00 97 706 70 ~ 72 255,26 155,078.11 rt stract Books ... a5 Cash on hand and in bank Total ........ 6 | .8380,040.05, Always has money to loan on farms on 5 or 7 years’ time at low interest rates. Pays interest on time deposits. : i We own and keep up with the records a complete Abstract le to all lands and town lots in Bates county. Furnish certified abstracts for reasonable fees. For fourty years we have been lending our money on farms and selling the mortgages to Life Insurance Companies, Savings Banks, Trust Companies and to hundreds of individual investors. During this long period of continuous business we have handled thousands of Faerpence aggregating millions of dollars. No cor- poration or individual that has purchased our mortgages have fost a dollar of interest or principal or paid anything for expenses. The Walton Trust Company has reid ur eepital $55,000.00. Surplus fund and profits (earned) $97,706.70. Our surplus and profit account is more than double the size of the same account of any other Bates County Banking Organization. This makes The Walon Trust Company the strongest financial institution in Bates county. Investors bu: Time Deposit Ce as U. S. Bonds. Your Patronage Is Solicited of Tit! ying our Farm Mortgages or purchasing our rtificates will hold securities practically as good Get an AVERY “YELLOW FELLOW” SEPARATOR IT_ SAVES THE GRAIN. Twelve Canvas Tests made on this Separator show an average saving of 99°°/10% —almost per- fect. Every Avery Separator regularly equipped with the famous IXL Grain Saving Separating Device without extra charge. IS_A SPLENDID GRAIN CLEANER. A letter. from an elevator owner says: ‘‘The Avery Separator sends me the cleanest grain I ever received.” FOR MAKING MONEY for a Thresherman and GIVING SATIS- A ON his—er sthere-ts no Machine like an The Strongest Warranted Sepa- Avery “Yellow Fellow.” rator built. Ask us for Printed Matter and Prices. Bennett-Wheeler Mere. Co. * is always. adept at finding rainy day jobs the real farmer, but now there-is probably to oil the harness. More coyote dens than usual’ being found this spring, and it see that many are getting the old coy thing about some wild animals is they increase faster after a country is well boy watching every hole in the coyotes are thicker than they were twenty years ago. TheFurrowsfolks havesettleddown to the use of strong kerosene emul- sion for a spray in the hen house.. I believe it is the best thing one can use. Toa boilerful of water, put a pound of soap. When this is boiling, take from the stove and add at least a gallon of kerosene and get it spray- ed as quickly as possible. If you can get it used while sizzling hot, it is all the better.. If mites are bad to start with use some carbolic acid in the spray, but it is not necessary except in extreme cases, for the stuff should then be handled with considerable care. The cold snap came pretty near nipping our fruit crop in the bud again this year, but it appears that the only damage done was to give us a good scare. Preparing a good seed bed and keep- ing the drag busy on the corn field until the corn begins to stick up through the surface will kill a multitude of weeds, many of which would be liable to live to enjoy a ripe old agé if they were allowed to flourish in their youth. Grass is very slow about starting this spring. It seems especially so to those who are: short of hay and fodder. A few warm days after the rains will, no doubt, change the face of nature, also the faces of many farmers. Those who can make their hired seed corn to monkey with, he'll have | to tell us something new ‘to tackle— along with the young. A strange see a binder used without them, and he- |i H yn to see his banker. settled than before. The coyote be-|it certainly must make a wonderful f longs to this class. In spite of: the|difference to the tears to have all] By this issue Uncle Sam will owe bounty, which is the cause of every|the neck weight and swing of the|his people about $963,000,000 upon binder removed. It is also possible ground for miles around, I know that) to harvest over much softer ground | Paid. with tongue trucks on, for a good deal of the machine weight may be shifted to the truck wheels, so the main drive wheel does not bog down as it does when carrying the weight of practically all the machine. It Startled the World. when the astonishing claims were first made about Bucklin’s Arnica Salve, but forty years of wonderful cures have proved them true, and everywhere it is now known as the balve on earth for burns, boils, scalds, sore cuts, bruises, sprains, swellings, eczema, shanped hands, fever sores and piles. _ Only 25c at F. T. Clay’s. Has Bill for Auto Highways. Washington, D. C., May 17.—A bill providing for two national auto high- ways wus introduced by Representa- tive Hobson. It authorizes the appointment of two commissions, its members from various States, to work out two gi- gantic improvements, one a highway to extend from the Atlantic to the Pa- cific Ocean, along the thirty-fifth parallel or north latitude; the other to extend from Canada to Mexico, on a line near the the twenty-third merid- ian west from Washington. These highways, the bill provides, shall be known, respectively, as the National East-West Auto“ Highway and the National North-South Auto Highway. help feel that they are part of the push instead of a thing that is bought and paid for are the ones who have little trouble with the hired help question. In the past the farmer’s part in politics has been to vote and pay bills. Is it not about time for us to keep tab on what our hired men in congress and the legislature are doing as _ well as the hired men on the farms? When young trees cannot be culti- vated a heavy mulch of straw is the next best thing. Ifa mulch is used it should be heavy enough to keep grass and weeds. from growing in order to get good results. Oil is the cheapest repair a person can make on machinery, and plenty of it means keeping down the repair bill to the minimum. For oiling a binder, I like the pump oil cans, sometimes called engine oilers. It is possible, with one of them, to oil every shaft without removing the new 25-cent straw hat with greasy hands and getting down on all fours. WOrKS QUIC! q 00. push on the plunger and’ enough pimp-ca made of hen manure is to cart it into No. 206 Kaneas City Accommodation. No, 208 St No 210 southwest Limite Kaosue City Stock Looal Freight... No. 209 Southwest Limited No. 27 K.C & Joplin Mail & Ex. No. 205 Nevada Accommod: No, 21 (Local Freight....... No. #08 Madison Local Freight, No 87 Madison Accomm Mo. 633 Butler Accom: No. 694 Butler Local Freight tralne carry passengers. comes out for the ordinary cup. pore rt dave torwasdi g. Becight for . i lowin, og. Li Interstate Division must be delivered before One of the best uses that can be|fveo'siook p,m, No freight billed for this train in morning. "It will prubably be. six fore the successful ‘bide ‘Panama Canal bonds left Washington |for the new securities | to-day. Every ‘one of the 23,000 but the estimates put it ‘national banks, State banks and trust |! Companies will receive one of the circulars and bidding slips. | ‘The man who wants to lend $100, $i $500, $1,000 or more'to the Govern- Pi Fment at 3 per cent interest can learn remedy for women. ‘They all the particulars by dropping around soot tl loti rf Dunlap, of Leadill, Tenn. try thea, 25c at F. ‘Clay's Notes Issue by Mo. Pac. . New York, May 19.—From inter- ests closely connected with the Mis- souri Pacific Railway Conipany, it was learned today the directors will soon authorize an issue of notes which will | ce 5 per Fete interest, and run for three years. 4 The pase amount of the issue has not been determined, but will ap- ximate $25,000,000. which various rates of interests are To make the new $50,000,000 loan as popular as possible the Treasury will-accept ordinary checks, . payable through clearing-house. cities, and postal orders in payment. The small bidders will receive first attention, which will make it possible for the individual investor to deal directly. Pay the Same Bill Twice! Even though you may not have had to pay the same bill twice yet, perhaps you have had the unpleasant experience ot thinking you might be called upon to do so. If you will adopt the plan of depesiting your money in this bank and making payment of all bills by check— no such circumstances will ever occur. The check itself is a valid receipt because it is returned to you by the bank bearing the signature of the _person to whom it was given. i 7 You can open an account subject to check with this band in any amount, the.- plan which assures convenience in the transactian of your financial affairs and unquestioned safety for your money. : Our Service Means Profit to You Missouri Pacific Time Table BUTLER STATION. January 12, 1911 NORTH. S 7 Louis & K. C. Mail & ae SOUTH. ation... INTERSTATE. WEST. ation... EAST. mods*ion...... phe... 5: Freight tr-ins Nos. 693 and 6v4 carry passen- on Inte D on. No other fre Alt ‘t for forwarding must be at depot or be held E.U. Vaxpgrvoorr, Agent. the plum orchard and let the trees Butler, Missouri LOW RATES FOR| SUMMER TRiPS Very low round-trip rates to hundreds of points in. the EAST, WEST, NORTH and SOUTH, will be sold daily beginning June 1st—Stopovers—Limit October 31. - CALIFORNIA. and NORTHWEST POINTS and RETURN at especially low rates on certain dates throughout the. _ summer, in addition to daily rates. Facts supplied by our nearest agent, or address make plums of it. One of the old sayings is that a good plum year is a good wheat year and if this is true, we had better do our best to.make it a good plum year. A good many hold fast to the theory that seed corn will rot quicker in real warm, wet ground than it. will in Ww if i ctld, Wek wround Ent Father: in. . ot aid ~ Children a oat clined to take considerable stock in| Office Phone 20 House Phone 10 the theory, too. When very warm and the soil is soaked the kernel} seems to ferinent, and of course it is Eyes Tested Free and Glasses’ Prop- 49-tf OR. J. M. NORRIS, - Eye, Ear and Throat Specialist erly Fitted. Office on south side ~ over Star Bakery. OR. J. M. CHRISTY FOUNDED 1880 TESTED BY TIME q Spanning .practically a third of a century of de- velopment in the business life of the city of But: ler and Bates county, The Missouri State Bank has reached a high plane ot service, and to-day is able to cater in its f 0 the people in this community. ‘ q Strengthened by the experience of thirty-one years of successful banking and fair dealing, its officers and directors are today aggessively looking for new busines, but at the same time carefully exercising the greatest prudence in the loaning of the Bank’s funds. “Strength not Size our Aim” DR. J. T. HULL Dentist : all up, with the germ then. When seed lies in half dry and half moist soil—just moisture enough to swell it—it is hard on the germ as anything North Entrance same that leads to Stew- —_—— "s Studio. - ‘Side square’ «Butler, Missouri || Mi ssouri State Bank “The Old Reliable” _

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