Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
ars ago. $1.75 will now buy the same amount of building material that it took $2 to buy a few ve at Hart, La., e: Why we can make these prices and maintain the high quality of material: First, we ha the best sawyers in the country, we are able to manufacture lumber that is high in quality, thoroughly season ship this lumber, moulding can make you as low a price on a small amount of lumber as the wholesaler-or jobber asks for it in car loads. We are the eastern agent for one of the largest and: most modern shingle mills in the west, and eve! the bundles you may return them and we refund your money. for us, he is abl only obtain a low price but with his years of experience and devoting all of his time to buy’ ME PLASTER material. And remember that every sack of our Portland Cement, and Standard Cement fect satisfaction. Acme is the standard of wall plasters. We manufacture and guarantee every Concrete Foundation Block we sell. Ae BUTLER, MO. PHONE and timbers direct from our own gaw mill to our yards, where it is sold to the consumer. Are You one of the Many who are Taking Advantage of the ‘Low Prices of Building Material a large tract of Long Leaf Pine which we are manufacturing into lumber, and as we have the latest and most modern saw mills, dry kilns, plainer, etc., in charge of one of and of the best grades. We This is the reason we E bundle of our Ex *A* Red Ce- dar Singles are guaranteed to be of the best le, and we guarantee them to give perfect satisfaction and if they are not 0. K. when you open As our buyer in Kansas City buys Cement, Plaster, Paint, Brick, etc., for our 16 retail yards he is able to buy in large quantities, and not le to get the highest standard of we sell is guaranteed to give per- Logan-Moore Lumber Company 18 —" SEPTEMBER 12 Neg CUTLER. Mo. smi = { 4 Representative Show!" The wondrous West of story and | _tradition. The West of the Indian and the Buffalo, of the Cowpuncher, the Pioneer and the Homesteader, worthy features than any other The West that is passing and has solely western institution in existence almost passed BIGGEST FRONTIER EXHIBITION in THE WORLD Direct and intact from the great Oklahor.a Ranch, whose name it bears and whose fame it proudly conserves EVERY PARTICIPANT TO THE MANNER BORN Hunters, Trappers, Scouts, Rangers, Roughriders, yr ndail ogier Tigures and Features’ of the Cattle ahing from oblivion and reviving for public profit and pleasure the romances, perils, tacular routine of the Great Western Outdoors A COMMEMORATIVE FETE Unfolding the roll of the stormy and convulsive history of the Vanished Border an< descending, step by step, to Te eine present a5 exemplified on the 101 Ranch, which atill resista the encroachments of advancing settlement EVERY BLEMENT AND INCIDENT RINGS TRUE The West depleted of its champions. Every name renowned for skill or daring in avocations of the range (ireater America’s Its record of growth without parallel inthe history of _ amusements, —__ More and greater variety and mul- tiplicity of novel, original and solidly Cowgirls, Indians, Vaequeros, Rurales, Senoritas, corey Tang wanes Stvers, and ev Bucking Horses, Buffaloes, Trail aud Round-up. hardships, chivalries and spec | | PICKETT THE MODERN URSUS *@nly man who ever. battled, barebanded, with a Spanish bull, a positive feature of every exhibition 2P.M.—TWO DAILY PERFORMANCES *siive"—8 P. M. GLORIOUSLY INAUGURATED BY A Cy \ VA a sec 18 West Boone $1. ‘derson lot 3, blk 9, Cogswells ad, | Real Estate Transfers. Chas C Miller to Mary S Nelson 80 a sec 36 Lone Oak $3100. F DGilltoS A Gill lot 4 blk 35 | Foster $1. | LC Corlett to J W Eggleson 80 a | 25 Charlotte $4000. J W Eggleson to L E Corlett 100 a | Sec 25 and 27 Charlotte $4000. John C Reeder to Clyde Gault lots {7 and 8 blk 18; lots 3 and 4 blk 16 | Sprague $2200. | DB Hickey to D E Smalley Jr lots 7 and 8 bIK 18; lots 3 and 4 blk 16 Rich Hill $6000. W M Garrison to D W Hills 776 a sec 6 Walnut $10. Joseph Jurd to S M Davis pt blk 5! eif’s add Rich Hill $250. I mith to T H Elliott 35 a sec 20 Deer Creek $1. | Ida Schlemmer to Eugene Schlem- | r-tr-sec-12-Deer-Creek $1. i John Fenton to Ellis Groves 82a R | O M Groves to H N Lope 41 1-2 a, sec | Charlotte $1500. | T A Smith to T B Kinney lots 1 and, 2 blk 24 Connellys ad Rich Hill $1000. | T L Harper to H N Harper et al’ tract secs 2and 3 Lone Oak $22000. | W H Dunn to G E Cantrell 200 a) sec 21 Grand River $15000. GE Cantrell to L R Allen 230a secs | 8 and 10 Shawnee and 200 a sec 21; Grand River part block 2L F Pages ad Adrian $16700. | G W Troupe to W R Owens tract | sec 26 Deepwater $1100. | James Harris to J W Rogers lots 7, | 10, 11, blk 8 Standish 2ad Hume $1. | Alice R Summers to J W Blansel | lots 52 and 51, Worland $275. | W A McElroy to J P Stanford tract» sec 2, Hudson $2,000. | R J Thomas to Leroy Crouch lots’ 7 and 8, Bakers add, Butler $450. Cynthia A Henderson to Eli Hen- | Fighting Hog Cholera. From almost every county of Mis- Miffed. souri there have come to the Agri- Jefferson City, Mo., Aug. 31.— cultural College during the past three Some of the advocates of thenorthern months appeals for help to check the and southern cross-State highways ravages of hog cholera. At the pres- between St. Louis and Kansas City ent time Franklin, Caldwell and Ray | are disposed to look upon the work of counties are centers of infection and Governor Hadley and the State Board every effort is being put forth to pre- | of Agriculture in pushing the central vent the further spread of the disease route and tentative announcing the in this sections. The veterinary de-'date for its official dedication as partment has been taxed to its utmost ‘either October 18 or 19, a8 being pre- capacity to supply serum as fast as’ mature. The central route was the calls have come but with its pres- selected the night of August 2, and it ent equipment this has not been pos- | was announced that the selection was sible. conditional. Over 54,000 doses have been sent’ It was the understanding of the out from the serum laboratory at representatives of all the routes that Columbia during the first eight the definite dedication of a cross-State months of 1911. Fifteen thousand | highway would not be officially set- hogs have been inoculated for the tled until about October 15 and the preventation of cholera during the | route that showed the greatest effi- |month of August alone. Four men ciency at that time would be dedicated are now in the field where the disease as the official route. jis most deadly, applying the serum Now the public is informed that the treatment and advising other pre- central route will be officially dedi- 'ventative measures. cated cither October 18 or 19 and a Last winter the Legislature of Mis- committee has been appointed to pre- | souri appropriated $25,000 to aid the pare a programme. This does not |work of the Veterniary Department look like the Governor and the State in fighting hog cholera. To say that Board of Agriculture considers the / double this sum is being saved to the other routes as being in the contest at | farmers of Missouri every month of all. [the year as a result of this original ‘There is great enthusiasm in part investment of $25,000 is an entirely of the counties along the central route, conservative statement. particularly in Boone, Callaway, - Montgomery and Lafayette counties. A Dreadful Sight Bonds have already been voted in Lafayette County and bond proposi- ito H. J. Barnum, of Freeville, N. Y.,! tions will be submitted in Boone, was the fever-sore that had plagued, Callaway and Montgomery counties |his life for years in spite of many early in September. 'Mid-State Highway Opponents jremedies he tried. At last he used’ September 5 the southern route ad- Bucklen’s Arnic Salve and wrote: It vocates will hold a meeting here, and ‘has entirely he: y a the Governor and the Board of Agri- scar left.’’ Hea - culture will likely be criticised for ma, cuts, bruise rns their seeming haste to shut out the s from competing for the and piles like magic. ) “State highway. F. T. Clay’s. Corn Binders and Drills This is the time of year you are thinking about sowing wheat, cutting corn, etc., and we have the kind of tools you need to do the business with. We have the McCormick corn binder, which is the best corn binder ever put on the market and is more durable than any corn binder made. If you need one don’t fail to see us. Our price is right. We also have a full line of the Dain 3 and 4 wheel corn cutters if you want something cheaper. In grain drills we have the Van Brunt and Thomas Disc Drills and they are both good ones. If you need a drill don’t fail to see our drills as they are away ahead of the one you have been using. Wagons and Sulky Plows. We have a full line of the Schuttler, Mitchell Butler $1. MA Adams toF A Gabby 150 a, | sec 8, Homer $7700. | R EL McManus to Louis Young, lots 4 and 5, blk 42, Ist ad, Rich Hill] W G Haff to M L Grant lots 5 to 13, | blk 24, Foster $79. | A P Gorden to O M Graves 41 1-2 a) and Bain farm wagons and they are all good ones. In sulky and gang plows we handle the John Deere and Rock Island. Stoves and Ranges. Don’t forget that we have the best and largest TYPICAL OVERLAND TRAIL FORENOON STREET PARADE ‘ Yntroducing every ‘character ‘and paraphernalia of the great enterprise ADMISSION ( including seat), SO Cts. CHILDREN i 5, Sa »25 Cts. 3 — | day of exhibition at (Ges — Tuesday, Sept. 12, °11 var, A | Obituary. Little Ola, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. N. E. Wright, died at her home Aug. 27, 1911, of complication of diseases. She had been afflicted for anumber of weeks, and: it seemed that nothing could be done to stay its | course, and in spite of skill and love death conquered and she went away. She was in her third year and had! lived but a few short years, but they | were heautiful years. 1 Death has conquered, did I say?) Nay, not so. Death has no power to, touch the true, the beautiful and the | good, and such she was. Rather let us say: O grave where is thy victory? O death, where is thy sting? Gone out of our sight for awhile | but not out of our love. Left us, but! not lost for love can never lose its | own. One Who Loved Her. { 1 SWEET TALK We intend to be in the game this winter on candies of alt grades, and especially on high grade box goods. We have secured the agency for the Johnson’s Candies The line which requires no talk to sell. They sell themselves. | | 4 | Our line is small during the hot weather, so re- member we will have no old summer baked candy to work off. New goods will arrive Thursday. Come in and get a new, fresh box of JOHNSON’S, United Drug Company TELEPHONE 15 lan, Canada, from Kansas City, Mo., sec 1, Watnut $t. SS Williams to E E Fink tract, sec 31, East Boone $9500. | Minnie L Brinkman to J N Wilker- | son 25 a, sec 13, Rockville $3600. | John C Hayes to T L Harper pt blk! 52, Butler $3000. | P J Cowgill to W P Cowgill 80 a,! sec 36, Grand River $2400. LR Allen to J A Harrison 260 a, | sec 10, Shawnee $3000. | Otto Atkinson to N M Tyler pt blk| 2, Pages ad, Adrian $1 LH Ehart to John T Ehart 1-5 int | 140 a, sec 2 and 3, New Home $1080. LE Utley to J T Ehart 1-5 int 140 a sec 2 and 3 New Home $1096. J T Slayback to F L Droz 7 a, sec 9, Osage $1450. | O A Townsend to L A Crigler lot} 10, blk 15, W Side ad, Butler $650. LACrigler to J T Ehart und 1-5 int 140 a, sec 2, New Home $1000. . Canada Wheat Lands. T have party going to Saskatchew- Sept. 12th. Excursion rates for 25 days. Ihave for sale sveral thous- and acres rich wheat, oats, flax and barley lands. This year wheat 20 to 40 bushels, flax 12 to 25, oats 80. to 112. Its an opportunity for money See me at once for particu- C. W. HESS, Butler, Mo. lars. line of stoves and ranges in Bates county and our prices are right. We handle the Round Oak and Wilson Heater in heating stoves, and the Malleable Steel Ranges and the Superior Cast cook stoves. - Hardware and Groceries. We have the largest and best selected stock of Hardware, Groceries and Queensware in Bates county, and will make prices to get your business. Thanking you for past trade and soliciting a continuance of same, we are - Yours Truly, Bennett-Wheeler Merc. Co, Telephone 82, Announcement E HAVE just completed enlarging our plant and have installed additional machinery necessary to take care of our increasing out-of-town business. We are now rated as one of the three largest Cleaning plants in the State. Our facilities for handling out-of-town business enables us to serve our customers just as well as if we were located in your city. All goods re- turned in three to four days after date received. Booklet of information and prices mailed on request. We pay express one way on out-of-town orders of $3. Both ways when amounting to $5. - Montrose : -Montrose Scie aon Pleasanton, Kans. Pleasanton, Kans. Scott's Customers Cover Missouri Like Sunshine in June SCOTT'S Dveine& 3829 Olive St... Cleaning Co. St. Louis, Mo.