The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, June 29, 1911, Page 7

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Some Goose Notes. | Geese are very long lived and may be profitably kept for a number of years. ' Yearling geese will not lay so many eggs as older geese and the eggs are not as fertile. { The Embden, Toulouse, and White Chinese are three of the most popular of the improved breeds of geese. ‘Put the goslings up when it rains hard else they may drown. There is | | danger until they are about grown. | Inraising geese it is well to bear ,in mind that the pure breeds are larg- er and more profitable than the mon- grel bred stock. | The feathers should be plucked ; When they are full ‘‘ripe.’’ To de- termine this see that there is no blood ‘in the ends of the quill; they will then pluck easily. It is best to make arun for the Shingles and Building Material Efas Talxcen Another Tumble You can now save $1.75 per 100 square feet by covering your roof with the best grade of Ex *A* Red Cedar Shingles instead of GALVANIZED CORRUGATED IRON. Why not take advantage of these low prices and repair and cover your buildings. We have a large stock of Red Cedar Shingles, and a car load of GALVANIZED CORRUGATED IRON ROOFING in our warehouse. - AND HOW IS YOUR GRANARY ? * While you are waiting for the thrashing machine would be an ideal time to build a GRANARY so you can take care of your grain after it is thrashed. By building a new granary or repairing the old one you would soon save enough grain to pay for the lumber that you would buy and you would have a place to store your grain to hold it for a higher price. Come in and let us make you an estimate on a granary—it will surprise you when you find how small the cost will be. We are headquarters for Bridge Material, White Oak, Cement, Gravel, Sand and Sewer Pipe Logan-Moore Lumber Company ae BUTLER, Mo. PHONE 18 on edge in a well drained grassy plot = | Keep them up two or three weeks un- | Real Estate Transfers. ‘til they get strong enough to wander C A Moore to W G Turk lot 3 and: a ie pasture, ieAmaa 1, blk 175, 2d Rich Hill $145, he goose is a good forager and on ’ Mar I “allen toKCS Ry Co TA good grass will do well without any mae 8 ana $734 MA ” grain in summer and during winter ees: sae i they will eat considerable forage if R oo Ss allan a a given them in good bright corn fod- sise, mt fie » Mamut der, clover and alfalfa along with Henry Peigh to T $ Whitten 2 a, Shelled corn, / sec 21, Walnut $250. Goslings will live on tender grass W R Dunham to SS McDonald 50 and what insects they can pick up, a, sec 9, Elkhart $2500. ‘but they will not thrive unless fed Bludford Howard to L J Fuller et /80™e grain for a few weeks. The; al 80a, sec 28, Mt Plaasant $6400, | Stain feed should consist, principally, James Witter to K CS Ry Co 2 a, |of coarse ground corn. meal mixed : sec 19, West Boone $325. rather dry, or cracked corn slightly m, Sirepta Standish to James Harris |C°0ked is recommended. lot 4, blk 8, Standish 2d ad, Hume;; Geese will do to pick the first time lots Q, H, E, D, A, ex, blk $3000. | when 14 to 16 months old and every NOTICE OF SPECIAL STATE! _ Sherifi’s Sale in Partition. —_| j i ELECTION. MEE es and Elizabeth Blankenbaker, vs. ‘Anno Bush, J. VW Biankenbaker, Artie Mer ritt, Ella Mulklus and Mary Jenkins. De- Tatua Olrnalecouttonpajetenunty, ailesoa i as . | In the Circuit Court of Bates county ssourl. Notice is hereby given that pursuant (By virtue and authority ofad cree andord-r of sale made by the said court, in the atove to an act of the 46th ‘general assembly entitled :anse, and ofa certitied copy th reof, of the state of Missouri, approved | dated May 25th, 1911 I will on March 24th, 1911, an election will be| ieenn ree ee teh aay mae | between the hours: f nine o’clock ‘n the tore- held on TUESDAY, AUGUST 1, 191], at | hoon, and five o’elock in the afternoon of that i i i | day, at the east door o} the conrt house the various polling places in said state | in the ty of Butler in Bates county, Missouri, | for the purpose of the ratification | sell at public vendue, to the highest bidder,the | A following described real estate, viz: thereat by the voters of said state of | “tne northwest quarter of the northeast quar- i :| ter of section twenty-thrie (23). The south- | an act, in words and figures as follows: | west quarter of the southeast quarter of sec- tion fourteen (14). The southeast quarter of | the southeast quarter of section twenty-threa NORTH. | 23) and the southwest quarter of the southwest | No, 206 Kaneas City Accommodation. | quarter of section twenty-four (24), allin town- | No, 208 St. Louis & K. C. Mall & Ex. PROPOSAL OF AN ACT OF THE 46TH GEN- | 8bip thirty-nine (39) of range thirty-one (31), all | No 210 Southwest Limit ERAL ASSEMBLY UF MISSOURI FoR said land and real estate being in Butea | Kangae City Stock. e Re Cae , | county Missouri. Terme: Tothe highest bid- ! Local Freight... THE RATIFICATION THEREOF BY THE} ane ey cash in Band Ae Aaa CoCr i SOUTH y S s .EC- 4 Sheritf of Bates County, Missouri. | ‘ VOTERS OF SAID STATE AT AN ELEC- | i2-t her! unty Onl oreua Sonne eantNeT taal: TION TO BE HELD FOR THAT PURPOSE | No. 207 K. ©. & Joplin Mail & Ex. MISSOURI PACIFIC IRON MOUNTAIN Missouri Pacific Time Table BUTLER STATION. June 17, 1911 ON TUBSD AY, AUGUST te 18lt Sheriff’s Sale in Partition. No. 201 (Loval Freight non wis p.m: Wm Queener to R L Keener lots iW ue) els PH ite ub me: Said act of the general asrembly being in INTERSTATE. to 7, blk 22, Ist ad, Rich Hill $275, | Geese that are well fed and kept in i STATE OF MISSOURI, words and figures as follows to-wit: a Gnaty otto ee eater John Williams to J B Wilson 80 a ‘good thrifty condition may be plucked , aN ACT | No, 698 Madieon Local Freight....... ; ss oftener and will turn off more feath- WOMEN AV AVOID By taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound The following letter from Mrs. Orville Rock will prove how unwise it is for women to submit to the dangers of a surgical operation when it may be avoided by taking Lydia Kh. Pinkham Vegetable Compound. She was fourwee. the hospital and came home ; ering worse than before, Here is her own statement. Paw Paw, Mi Two years ago red a dis. pat 1 could not be on my feet for lime. My ntreated me for seven months Without much retiet and at last sent ine to Ann Arbor for man aperation, Twas there four weeksand eame home worse {1 My mot “l me to try Lydia ® Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and I did. Today Lam welland strong and do all my own housework. 1 owe my health to Lydia E. Pinkham’'s Vegetable Compound and advise my friends who are afflicted with any female complaint to try it.’’— Mrs. ng Pore, ady E. | ORVILLE Rock, R. R. No.5, Paw Paw, Michigan. If you are ill do not drag along until an operation is necessary, but at once take Lydia bh. Pinkhain’s Vegetable Compound. For thirty years it has been the stan- dard remedy for women's ills, and has positively restored the health of thou- sandsof women, Why don't youtry it? What the Long Drought Has Done in Missouri. | Anthorizing and directing the contracting of | the Hability of the state of Missouri, by the isenance of its state bonds in a eum, not to! exceed three and one-half millions of dollars, and for the sale of said bonds, to provide means for the building, furnishing and other equipment of a new state capitol at the pres- ent seat of government of the state, and for; the purchase of additional state capitol prem- ises, and also providing for the payment of said bonds and interest accruing thereon. Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the State of Missouri, as follows: Section 1, That the contracting of the Mabil- ity of the state of Missouri by the issuance of | its bonds in an aggregate sum not to exceed ; threé and one-half millions of dollars (rendered | necessary by the unforseen emergency of the | destruction of the state capitol by fire), is here- by authorized and directed, said bonds to be in! the denomination of one thousand or five hun- dred dollars each, or of both sald denomina | tions (as the state board of jund commissioners may determine) and be pa able thirteen years from the issuance thereof; shall be payable to bearer in lawful money of the United States, snd shall bear interest at 8 rate not to exceed | three and one-half per centum a year (as the etate board of fand commissioners may deter- mine), payable semi annually on the first days of January and Jaly of each year and to that end suitable coupone shall be attached to each | bond for the payment of said interest; each cou: | pon shall have a facsimile of the signature of | the state treneurer engraved thereon. Said, bonde shall be redeemable at the option of the | @tate after eight years from date, shall be! —- signed by the governor, and be countersigned | by the secretary of state, with the great seal of | the atate attached, and aball be-regietéred by | the state anditor, to which he shall certify on | each bond, and authenticate such registration | by bie signature and hie official seal attached; | said bonds, when 0 prepared and executed, | under the supervision of the state board of fund commissioners, shall be sold to the best | advantage by said board, bat for not Jess than par. The proceeds of said sale or ty constitute a fand to be mated as the capi- tol building fand, and shall be applied exclus ively to the building of a new state capitol at the present seat of government of the state, | including the furnish!ng and other equipment | of eaid building and the purchase by the state | of addi‘ional capitol premises adjoining those | now owned by the stat Provided, that three: bun tred thoneand dollars of said fund, cr so Mmuch thereof as may be necessary shall be/ epplied to the furnishing and other equipment of said capitol, and two hundred thoneand dol- | lars of eaid fond, or s0 n uch thervof as may be necessary, shall be applied o the purchase of | land (adjoining the present state cap'tal premi- | ees) for additional state capitol premises: Provided, aleo, that raid building shell becon- structed with native Missouri granite and | etone Contract or contracts tor expendituree | to carry out the purp ‘ses of "hie actin excess of | said toree and one-nalf millions of dollars with interest collected thereon. shall, to the amount | of said excees, be tllegal and void and forever non payable. Sec.2 That the general assembly shall and” dots hereby levy an ani ax of two cents on the one hundred dollars valuation of tne tax- able property in thie state for the payment of the accruing interest on said bonds and for the creation of a sinking fand for the payment thereof, said taxes, beginning with the year | 1912, to be levied and collected annually as in| case of other state taxes in this state, until said bonds are fally paid. | Sec. 8. That this act shall go into effect and | be in force from and after its ratification by the voters of this state at an election, to be held for the purpose, authorized by the zeneral as ‘sembly, as contemplated and required . by | clause 3 of section 44, article 1V of the Conatita- | tion of this state. | Approved March 16, 1911 | | | | 1 i State of Miseouri Department of State I, Cornelius Rosch, secretary of state of the etate of Missouri, hereby certify that the! foregoing is s fall, true and complete copy of the ‘*Proposal of an act of the 46th general as- sembly of Missouri for the ratification thereof by the voters of said state at an election to be held for that purpose on Tuesday, August 1, 1911. | In testimony whereof, I hereunto ect my hand and affix the great seal of the state of Missouri Done at office in the City of Jeffer- eon, thie Sth day of April, A. D. 1911. CORNELIUS ROACH, Secretary of State. 96-39-10 Bertha May Smith et al, Plaintiffs, vs. Henry Bryant, et al, Defendants. EAST. In the Circuit Court, May term, 1011. | No. 638 Butler Accommodation. By virtue and authority of a decree and order | No, gy4 Butler Local Freight, of sale made by the said court, in the above en Freight trnine Nos, 693 and titled cause and ofa certified copy thereof, I gere on Interstate Division. will on tralns carry passengers. No 37 Madison Accommodation... 4 carry paseen Saturday, July 15, 1011 between the hours uf nine o’clock in the fore- | noon itnd tive o’clock in the afternoon of that | for following day’s forwarding. city of Butler in Bates county, Missouri, sell at public vendue, to the highest bidder, the fol- lowing describe ' real es.ate, viz: The south half of the southeast quarter and | the east half of lot one (}) of the »orth ast quar- ter of sevtion four (4), towvship thirty-nine | (39), range thirty (31), In tates county, Mis- | sourl. ‘Terms: To the highest bidder for cash in hand, W.J BULLOCK, 35-td Sheriff of Bates County Miesvuri. | _ erly Pitted, Office on)south side Warrensburg Pigeon Lofts “over St#" Bakery. 60 pair Homer or Carrier | Horgan o Ser tp itneEl DATE DR. J. M. CHRISTY train in norning. E, GU, VANDERVOORT, DR. J. M. NORRIS, Eye, Ear and Throat Specialist .$4 to $15 per pair | Diseas.s ot Women and Children a Specialty Horneaux...... $15 to $50 per pair | BUTLER S MISSOURI Our stock is direct from the | Office Phone 20 umporters and all guaran: [fice beer ee oe — teed in every respect. e above offer on Homers will DR. J, T. HULL only be good until we sell Dentist one pen of sixty pair. REFERENCE-—Banks: , ; clon Gilacne: North side gue babe 2 2. BOUT, ae ee DENTIST Butler, Missouri East Side of the Square Phone No:312 Commer- Office Phone 3, Residence Phone 268, T. G. BOULWARE Physician & Surgeon ‘Mo. j dren a specialty. | | Attorney at Law Notary Public ' East Side Square | BUTLER, MISSOURI Wild Flower H. E. MULKEY, Registered Veterinary Surgeon BUTLER, MISSOURI Office ee R. Guyton’s Livery Barn. 5 —neen Gathering HAVE YOU EVER DONE IT? It’s lots of fun to pack your basket full of ‘‘goodies,’’ get a congenial crowd together, this pleasure. Along the | MISSOURI PACIFIC A little | IRON MOUNTAIN “CLENO” are dozens of semi-wild, pictur- }esque vales and wooded spots, used now will prove that ‘A | within a few hours’ ride. ASK THEM ABOUT stitch in time saves ten”’ if you will use Cleno with your |E. C. Vandervoort, Agt., young fowls. It will surely Frank P. Prosser, i 2) eens eee ae id them pf mites and lice and . ie them to become healthy #) A Vacation H D. P. A., Joplin, Mo AT Little Expense right near home, too, is yours if you know how to go about it. Along the lines of the Missouri Pacific-Iron Mountain are beautiful little places that are ideal for camping, fishing, picnicing; etc, Ask about them. E. C. VANDERVOORT, Agt FRANK P. PROSSER, @.P. A., Joplin, Mo. broilers, layers and eventual- | ly money in your pocket. { What you Buy we Stand by CLAYWY’S Prescription Orug Store NORTH SIDE SQUARE. “The right place.” 2:01 p.m. 3:50 p.m. ° a oP aly saimall INO TaHeRtelgnte JH Hengen to P M Flinn (same | All freight for forwarding must be at depot not later than eleven o’ciock a& aor De ee A See 24 M d, $7000. i retght for A Sec 24 Moun } | day, at the east door of the court house in the inturstate Division must be delivered before ~ « | five o’clock p. m, No freight billed for this Agent, Eyes Tested Free and Glasses Prop- House Phone 10/ aS unable to work. Death seemed Entrance same that leads to Stew- nate coughs, stubborn colds, hoarse- Butler, Missouri: any throat or lung trouble its su- | Office North Side Square, Butler, Diseases of women and chil- Phone 186 and journey to some nearby woodland for a day of . sec 22, West Boone $4400. PM Flinn to W M Garrison 776 a, sec 6, Walnut $1 and Ex. land) $10. Willie Fergus to P. M. Allison 120! Clara A Ward to Ella B Bosley 170! A Sec 22 & 20 Deer Creek, $6800. | Annie B. Bryant to E. M. Dicker- | son lots 1, 2, 3, blk 1 Balls Ad Hume, |and if it should turn cold soon after | | plucking they should be given a good! can be saved. $1500. * Wins Fight for Life. It was a long and bloody battle for| life that was waged by Jaines B. Mer- shon, of Newark, N. J., of which he writes: “I had lost much blood from |lung hemorhages, and was very weak ‘and run-down. For eight months I {close on my heels, when I began, three weeks ago, to use Dr. King’s New Discovery. But it has helped me greatly. It is doing all that you claim."’ For weak, sore lungs, obsti- ness, la grippe, asthma, hay-fever or preme. 50cand $1.00. Trial bottle free. Guaranteed by F. T. Clay. Inventions Reach Million. Washington, D. C., June 26.—The United States Government will issue _its one-millionth patent for an inven- |tion on August 1, next, and the honor will go to an inventor who has been/ designated by President Taft. Several weeks ago President Taft | received a letter from an American inventor saying he had perfected a device which he intended to patent, and that ae would like to have ‘the honor of receiving number 1,000,000. The President asked the Commission- er to comply with the request if it! ;should prodvee from one to two, ers than if they are half starved and out of condition. | If geese are well cared for they | Wheat crop materially reduced. Potato crop ruined. Hay crop reduced three-quarters. Clover a complete failure. Alfalfa damaged. crop a failure. pounds of feathers annually. Three | good sized geese will produce a pound | of feathers at one picking, but this is! Pastures dried up. more than the average. They should | Miscellaneous vegetables not be plucked in very cold weather | peas, ete. —almost ruined. Corn is still in fair condition and beans, warm dry place in the barn until it! The following was the production ; turns warmer.---Missouri Farmer and | last year: | Breeder. Corn crop.. . $107,919, 354 i‘ eieeee, “KORE. a5. ; 7,505, 185 A Dreadful Wound. Potatoes. ..... 3,935, 742 from a knife, gun, tin can, rusty nail, | Hay RU eHPTA AN CTR Nene Pee 42,907,984 fireworks, or of any other nature, de- | Miscellaneous vegetables 7,500,000 mands prompt_ treatment with Buck- | - vente len’s Arnica Salve to prevent blood | Republic. poison or gangrene. Its the quickest |= ae = surest healer for all such wounds as | also for Burns, Boils, Sores, Skin Eruptiods, Eczema, Chapped Hands, Corns or Piles. 25c at F. T. Clay’s. —_—_—_—— A NEW CAPITOL WILL BOOM IMMIGRATION. In the cure of consumption concentrated, easilydigest nourishment is necessary. For 35 years During the last decade Missouri did not make the gain in popula- tion that she should, and Texas passed her in the rank of states. The people must get into the immi- gration game during the next ten i years and regain this lost ground. A good way to begin is to advertise to the world the fact that we are a] | wide-awake, progressive people by | Mrs. Lucinda Warderman. carrying the proposition for a new] | capitol building on August Ist. It's Mrs. Lucinda Warderman, aged 74 a pivotal time with Missouri, a cri-| | years and 5 months, departed this life at her home in this city early sis in which we must forge ahead H Monday morning after a long. illness. or fall back. The enthusiasm fol- lowing a successful campaign for | Mrs. Warderman was an old resident of this county and was cott’s Emulsion has been the standard, treatment for All Draggtets world-wide consumption. anative of were not incompatable with the regu- | lations of the office. : | The Con.missioner reported to. the | President that the device was merit- | orious and would constitute a valuable | addition to the list of American in-| ventions and that patent No. 1,000,000! would be granted the inventor. The number was placed in reserve and will be officially recorded on the first issue day of August. i No More Whisky Advertising. The Twice-a-week Republic of St. | Louis, Mo., makes the announcement | that no more whisky advertising will | be printed in its paper. This will be | good news to most of our readers. | The Twice-a-Week Republic is the | oldest, biggest and best metropolitan | semi-weekly newspaper in the United | States, and by cutting out this line of | advertising it should greatly increase | ts circulation in ‘this community. | The subscription price is 50 cents per; year, but for a short time only they! will make a special rate of three years | for one $1. Besure to take advan-| tage of this liberal offer, and by all/ | means advise your friends and neigh- | bors of the fact that all whisky and |liquor advertising has been discon- | ued and that $1 will pay for a fese:| year subscription. rite for a free} |sample copy. Send orders to the) |The St. Louis Republic, St. Louis, | Mo. 20-tf | ‘a new capitol would give a great |Ilinois. She -was- the impetus to the band wagon of progress and send Missouri rolling on towards the head of the column, | | | 2, , ‘ ; se de late Ed. ardermat while the defeat of the proposition ule Warderman about a year ago. would fall as a wet blanket of dis- widow of who died conragement upon the Five children, Mrs. Lula Chritton Missourians, and turn the tide of} ‘of Butler; Harley Warderman, resid- hopes o1 | immigration from our doors. eal ing west of Butler, Mrs. Be rry of i must have a new capitol: we need it now; the three and one-half mi! lion dollar proposition is a reasonable one; to curry it by a sing two-thirds majority would worth much to the state at t cal time; why not give Mis souri the prestige of such a splen- did victory for progress and enter prise? Pueblo, Colo., Mrs. J. G. Powers of Cooper county, W. Ho Warderman of Cold Springs, No M., survive her jto mourn the loss of a kind and loy- ing mother and a good woman. Funeral services, conducted by the Rev. Jared were held Tuesday after- noon at 2:30 o'clock and interment was made in Oak Hill cemetery. most We Give Away Absolutely Free of Cost, The People’s Common Sense Medical Adviser, in Plain English, or Medicine Simplified, by RK. V. Pierce, M. D., Chief Consulting Phys to the Invalids’ Hotel and Sur- gical Institute at Buffalo, a book of 1008 large pages and over 700 illustrations, in strong paper covers, to any one sending 21 one-ceat stamps to cover cost of m: only, or, in French Cloth binding for 31 stamps. Over 680,000 copies of this complete Family Doctor Book were sold in cloth binding at regular price of $1.50. Afterwards, one and a half million copies were given away as above. A new, up-to-date revised edition is now ready for mailing. Better send NOW, before all are gone. Address Worvn’s Dis- rensary Mepicat Association, R. V. Pierce, M. D., President, Buffalo, N. Y. DR. PIERCE’S FAVORITE PRESCRIPTION THE ONE REMEDY for woman's peculiar ailments food enough

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