The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, August 17, 1911, Page 6

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Woman's Power Over Man Woman's most glorious 7 to awaken and hold the pu worthy man. When sone uo one in the wide worl 4 she endures. The wer mess and derangem ganism soon loses aman. Her ge her good looks, and her power and the thous: ments. specific for the weakness lates, strengthens and heals. nt is the power J honest love of a and still loves on, from weak- vornanly ore way the heart of and she loses _ , her ariability $a woman, ince of his staii of able physicians, has prescribed for and cured Tle has devised a successful remedy for woman’ Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. es and disorders peculiar to women. Medicine dealers sell it. Dr. R.V. Pierce, of Buffalo, N.Y., with It is a posi It purifies, regu- No honest dealer will advise you to accept a substitute in order to make a little larger profit. IT MAKES WEAK WOMEN STRONG, SICK WOMEN WELL. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets regulate and strengthen Stomach, Liver and Bowels. $50 for a Gallon of Apples. Columbia, Mo.—The Missouri State Board of Horticulture is offering a cash prize of $50.00 to the boy. that will seleet and send in the best half peck of apples of any variety. The money will be given to pay the ex- penses of attending one term of the Short Course in the College of Agri- culture at Columbia this fall. From the gallon of apples sent the commit- tee in charge will pick out the best five specimens, enough to make up one plate. ij The contest is opento all boys in Missouri between the ages of s and twenty years who have never at- tended an agricultural college or been connected with an experiment station. The apples may be taken from any orchard but a paper must be written setting forth why he chose the variety he did, and what treatmekt the trees have received in the way oP cultiva- tion, spraying, pruning, ete. Two neighbors must bear witness that the fruit was actually selected by the boy < that sends it in. The apples must be sent by prepaid express tu Professor J. C. Whitten, Professor of Horticulture, Columbia, Mo., not later than October 15th. The prize will be awarded before the 20th. Fruit will kept in cold storage, free, and later exhibited at shows and expositions which may be held by the Board of Horticulture. Each plate will be exhibited under the name and address of the owner and all except the plate that won the fruit | ‘scholarship, will be eligible to ary prize that my be offered. By this plan everyone is practically assured of winning a cash prize even though he failed to land the scholarship. The $50.00 prize will be sufficient to pay all necessary’ expenses of at- tending the first term of the Short Winter Course which opens Novem- ber Ist, and continues for eight weeks. For full information about about the Short Winter Course, write to the College of Agriculture, Columbia, Mo. A King Who Left Home. set the world to talking, but Paul Mathulka, of Buffalo, N. Y., says he ?S AT HOME the King ves—Dr. King’s New and that they're a bless- Cure consti ion, dyspepsia. Life Pills ing to all his family. tion, headache, indig Only 25c¢ at F. T. Cle Clark Gets Big Watermelon. Washington, D. C., Aug. 9.—From a. rth Carclina admirer to-day Speaker Clark received a watermelon, weighing eighty pounds. The melon was sent by State Sena- tor W. S. Cobb of Robeson County, North Carolina, and the messenger who carried it into the Speaker’s room was Lee*Christian, a former North Carolina slave. Mr. Cobb, who is one of the larg- est farmers in his State was in Wash- ington a short time ago and was intro- duced to Mr. Clark by Representative Godwin. 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 piiysician with great care. Do you use the same caution in selecting the druggist to fill your physician's pre- scriptions? .W. Hes The Rexall Drug Store, Butler, Mo Financial Statement of the Walton Trust Company ON MAY 15, 1911 ASSETS Farm m ortgages given for borrowed money... Stocke and Bonds Office b illding ard to! Other real estate Bates County Title Ab- tract Books ... Cash on band an: Total x LIABILITIES Capital StOCK eee eeeeee ceseeee 8 59,000, 00 Surplus Fund and Profits 97 706 70 Always has money to loan on farms on 5 or 7 years’ time . at low interest rates. Pays interest on time deposits. - + We own and keep up with the records a complete Abstract of Title to all lands and town lots in Bates county. Furnish certified abstracts for reasonable iees. . For fourty years we have been lending our money on farms "FARM FURROWS. Farmer and Stockman. Our neighbor‘bought a seven-foot binder, with pole truck, and the way he waded into a big piece of oats and had it standing in shocks before ten o’clock in the morning was a caution. My little three-horse, six-foot affair would have taken all day. And his horses were scarcly puffing. Ihave resolved to have extra re- pair parts to my binder, such pieces that wear quickest, always on hand. This summer I lost one whole day because a little spring gave out on me and I had to take a trip to the shop nine miles away, only to find that the par was not in store. When seeding clover be careful not to have your nurse crop too thick. Ihad four fields nicely started this spring, two with oats and two with barley. The barley pieces held a much less rank growth than the oats ground with the result that in the latter the clover has dwindled down sadly. On our farm barley has prov- en a uniformly better nurse crop than oats, anyway. It is not always the neatest plow- mani who does the best job. It is a little harder on the ‘horses to just turn the furrows dn edge in a rough looking mass, but the soil can be tilled better and there is less soil washing because the ground | will hold more rain. Try it and be con- vinced. Cheese factories have rather hard sledding of it in my neighborhood. | All the farmers are waking up to the | value of skim milk in raising young stock, and the cheese makers, acting ;on some emphatic hints received, are converting their establishments into creamers. As yet, no separator agents have objected to this movement. Scarcely a week ago my newest | neighbor bought a fine team, of which he was very proud. Last Sunday one of the horses came stumbling in from the pasture so badly cut by barb wires that it bled to death in a few minutes. And still people will not put up woven-wire fences for their horses. It seems that agents have never been thicker than this summer. Now, while some of the gentry may be all right, I -hject to have some oily-tongued hihi out to the field where Iam w king and try to argue lightning rods or pain killer when Iam concerned about getting some important work done ina hurry. One of the joys of life is trying to build a solid concrete silo when the | nearest gravel bed is a dozen ‘miles away and good crushed stone cannot be had. It’s a nice little job to sand- wich in between our other work, but we are doing it. No more short feed for our cattle if we can help it; last summer taught us a lesson. We have decided on a new use for our grain shed. As soon as we have thrashed we expect to put a cement floor into it and fit up the whole shed as acorn curing house. Several hun- dred bushels of $3 corn can easily be stringed to the rafters, dried quickly by means of a cheap heater, and sold at a good price. That is better than letting expensive buildings lie idle-14 months in the year. This spring a couple of people of a fine corn bottom who went over his land again and again with the har- row before planting time, making the entire ten acres as fine as a garden. But'this fall this same man has the best piece of corn in the entire neigh- borhood. Another strikeout for good tillage. Soon willthe phonographs be grind- ing out campaign speeches again. | move that all the candidates do their campaigning by making phonograph records, then, when the ‘‘deer pee- pul”’ get sick of the business they can easily ‘‘break the record.” This isa reform worthy working for. It looks now like we might have a plentitude of good fall pasture. Per- haps the dairyman will have a chance to make back a little he has lost in the last few months. He will if he has enough good cows to come in 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 mortgages aggregating millions of dollars. No cor- tion or individual that has purchased our mortgages have a doliar of interest or principal or paid anything for expenses. The Walton Trust Company has paid up capital $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 Walton Trust Company the strongest financial institution in Bates Tavestors buying our Farm Mortgages or purchasing our Time Di it Certificates will hold securities practically as good as U. S. Bonds. Your Patronage Is Solicited fresh soon. A dairyman should plan to have at least half of his herd fresh in the fall, anyhow. If it were not for corn fodder, I don’t know what some of us would do for roughness for our stock this winter. This gives little relief for the city consumer of roughness, how- ever, for corn fodder is a product of the farm that cannot very well be! shipped. A few years ago shredding and baling was tried, but it was found that.shredded fodder in bales ‘spoiled quickly in damp weather. Corn fod- der has to be fed out on or near the farm that produced it, and I am not sure but what this is a wise provision of nature. We sell too much of the grain, and should we get into the habit of selling the fodder, too, our farms would soon be sold in that form. It might be treason to say it, but I noticed the raincrow kept his call in for rain all through the drouth, but a few days before it actually did rain he stopped his song, and, apparently, gave it up. Several other signs of dry weather were “‘loudest’’ just be- fore the drouth breaker came. Signs are funny things, anyhow. Thirty Years Together. Thirty years of association—think of it. How the merit of a good thing stands out in that time—or the worth- lessness of abad one. So there’s no guesswork in this evidence of Thos. Ariss, Concord, Mich., who writes: “T have used Dr. King’s New Discov- | ery for 30 years, and it’s the best cough and cold cure I ever used.” Once it finds entrance in a home you can’t pry it out. Many families have used it forty years. It’s the most in-| fallible throat and lung medicine on! earth. Unequaled for lagrippe, as- thma,. hay-fever, croup, quinsy or sore lungs. Price 50c and $1.00. Trial bettle free. Guaranteed by F. | T. Clay. Recipes. The Commoner. i Plum Butter—Let the plums get so) ripe that they are soft enough to rub; through a sieve or colander without! previous cooking, then use the pulp; WW © EARNE SURPLUS $30,000 amma FARMERS BANK BUTLER.MO. EVIDENCE OF SOUND MANAGEMENT A sound, well-managed bank invar- iably lays gside, regularly, part of its earnings, thereby accumulating a fund for the protection of deposits. The Farmers Bank-of Bates county has always followed this desirable plan and as a result it now bears the distinction of having a greater Sur- plus Fund than any other bank in the county—$30,000.00. This sum, to- gether with its Capital, makes a total of over $80,000.00 as a protection for all deposits. Both small and large accounts are welcomed, either subject to check or at interest in our Savings Depart- ment. with an equal amount of sugar, boil-! ing slowly until done. If the butter, is made in this way, it will not have: the strong taste that comes froin the outside of the fruit, but retain the, taste of the pulp. | Tomato Soy—One peck of ripe to-| matoes, one pound of sugar, two) large onions, two peppers, one cup-| ful of salt, two tablespoonfuls of cin- | namon, one tablespoonful of cloves, | one quart of cider vinegar. Peel the; tomatoes by scalding and skinning, and put all the ingredients, except the vinegar, together in a preserving ket- tle and boil for two hours, or longer if not thick enough. Just before taking from the fire add the vinegar and let boil slowly until thoroughly heated again, then bottle in small bottles. were inclined to laugh at the owner! Green Tomato Sweet Pickles—Two pounds of green tomatoes, full growth but not beginning to ripen; one pound of brown sugar, one pint of vinegar, teaspoonful of mace, cinnamon and cloves. Slice‘and boil the green to- matoes in ordinarily strong ginger tea | until the green taste is gone, then add | al the above ingredients and boil all| together for ten minutes, then seal in | glass jars. The rich, red heart of a ripe water- melon, cooked in its own juice, makes | a ruby-red butter that is very fine; | marmalade of yellow muskmellon is {| very fine. Yellow, red and green tomatoes may all be used in making butters, by cooking, pressing out the seeds and then cooking down until’ quite thick; the stirring must be con-, stant in cooking any kind of butter or | , FOUNDED 1880 TESTED BY TIME gq 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 of service, and to-day . is able to cater in its fullest sense to the needs of 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” Missouri State Bank “The Old Reliable’’ marmalade, to keep from scorching. | Here is a famous French sauce, | very rich, and but a little is served]: with any portion. Beat together with | || a whip the yolks of four eggs and a scant cupful of powdered sugar; the, sauce-pan containing the mixture must be set on the back of the range | | and beating should be rapid--a Do-/ ver’s beater is good to use in this. When the mixture is creamy, add| Farm Loans Abstracts examine and perfect titles to same. Investments interest on time deposits. slowly a glass of fruit juice, still||! beating, and as soon as all the juice||/ is poured in, remove from the stove, | but continue to beat until smooth and quite thick, as it cools. ‘Black Bean Soup—Soak two cup- fuls of black beans in cold water over night; fry one-third pound of salt | pork thinly sliced, add a sliced onion, | and brown; stir in a half pound of DUVALL-PERCIVAL TRUST C0. W. F. DUVALL, President, CASH CAPITAL, $50,000. - FARMERS BANK BUILDING, BUTLER, MO. We have money to loan on real estate at a low rate of interest with privilege to pay at any time. 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, s¢/uring you reasonable interest on good security/ We pay J. B. DUVALL, Vice-President, Arthur Duvall, Treasurer. W. D. Yates, Title Examiner. round steak chopped fine; then add the beans and cover with five quarts of cold water; cook slowly two and one-half hours, add a small carrot thinly sliced, and four cloves and cook for another hour. Strain through a coarse sieve and return to the kettle to heat; cut one hard-boiled egg and one-quarter of a lemon in thin slices, and put in the soup tureen Notice to Breeders, ‘| have the best bunch of pure bred Percher- japples try this: | then cook soft in crocks in the oven; and pour the hot soup over it. For making apple butter of inferior Do not peel but quarter and take out the cores, cut out all decayed places and hard knots when thoroughly softened, rub through a sieve just coarse enough to take out grape seeds, and this will remove all bits of skin and hard little knots. Then return to the crocks, or kettle and let cook slowly in the oven until done. on Stallions—more size and quality. _ These young stallions will be allowed to serve a limited number of mares for the public during the season of 1911. Call and inspect this stock. See bills at barn for terms. FARM THREE MILES NORTHEAST OF BUTLER. J.W.B BUTLER, MISSOURI

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